Key Takeaways
The Fed's two-day policy meeting concludes Thursday in what will be Jerome Powell's last as chair, with rates widely expected to hold at 3.50%–3.75%The critical question is not whether rates hold but whether policymakers signal rate cuts are derailed or merely delayedFed Governor Waller, who backed three rate cuts last year over labor market concerns, has shifted to wariness about inflation risks this monthThe US is experiencing its fourth supply shock in five years -- pandemic reopening, Russia-Ukraine, the tariff war, and now the Middle East conflictFed officials do not expect inflation to return to the 2% target for at least another year, with the Strait of Hormuz still effectively blocked and jet fuel prices surging
The Federal Reserve concludes its two-day policy meeting Thursday in what will be Jerome Powell's final session as chair, with markets locked in on not the rate decision itself -- a hold at 3.50%–3.75% is essentially certain -- but the language policymakers choose to describe the path ahead for rate cuts amid a resurgent stagflation threat.
Nick Timiraos, the Wall Street Journal reporter widely followed as a conduit for Fed thinking, wrote on April 28 that the central debate inside the Fed is over policy wording and whether officials will characterize the current pause as a temporary delay or a more significant derailment of the rate cut trajectory signaled earlier this year.
The Fourth Supply Shock in Five Years
The backdrop for Thursday's decision is unusually complicated. The US economy is now navigating its fourth distinct supply shock in five years: the post-pandemic economic reopening, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the tariff war, and now the Middle East energy disruption triggered by the Iran conflict. Each has forced the Fed to recalibrate its inflation and growth outlook in real time, and the current shock arrives at a particularly sensitive moment -- with inflation still above target, growth slowing, and energy prices surging.
WTI crude has broken above $103 per barrel and Brent has topped $105, with jet fuel prices soaring as the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively blocked to normal commercial traffic despite a nominal ceasefire. The energy shock is feeding directly into inflation expectations, complicating the Fed's ability to pivot toward easing even as growth risks mount -- a classic stagflationary dynamic.
Waller's Pivot Signals Internal Shift
One of the clearest indicators of the Fed's internal recalibration comes from Governor Christopher Waller, who as recently as last year supported three rate cuts driven by concerns about labor market softening. This month, Waller has turned notably cautious on inflation risks -- a significant shift from one of the more dovish voices on the board that suggests the stagflation concern is gaining traction inside the institution.
Fed officials broadly do not expect inflation to return to the 2% target for at least another year, a timeline that effectively rules out near-term rate cuts unless growth deteriorates sharply enough to override the inflation constraint.
What Markets Are Watching
With the rate decision itself a non-event, the entire market focus falls on the post-meeting statement and Powell's final press conference as chair. The key signal traders are watching: will the Fed describe the current pause as a temporary delay in an ongoing easing cycle, or will it shift language in a way that suggests the rate cut path has been meaningfully pushed back?
For crypto markets, the distinction is significant. Bitcoin has been partially supported by expectations of eventual Fed easing, and any language that signals a more prolonged hold could remove a key pillar of the current bull narrative. The meeting also carries symbolic weight as Powell's final act as chair before Kevin Warsh's confirmation hearing -- adding a layer of institutional transition uncertainty to an already complex policy backdrop.