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Why Markets Are Starting to Question the Fed’s Dot Plot

VT Markets

Fed dot plot

The March 2026 Fed meeting looked steady on the surface, but the message underneath was far less reassuring. Policymakers voted 11 to 1 to keep rates unchanged at 3.50% to 3.75%, and the median dot plot still held on to one rate cut in 2026. Even so, the broader tone shifted in a more cautious direction, leaving markets to question whether that easing path still makes sense.

The biggest issue is inflation. The Fed lifted its 2026 PCE inflation forecast to 2.7%, up from 2.4% in December, while Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged that price pressures had already been running firmer than expected before the Iran conflict intensified. With geopolitical tension now adding fresh uncertainty through energy markets and supply risks around the Strait of Hormuz, the inflation outlook has become even more difficult to read.

At the same time, the committee’s internal balance has clearly moved. Powell said four or five members shifted their projections from two cuts to one, which shows the centre of the Fed is becoming more cautious even if the headline dot plot has not fully broken down. That matters because markets often focus first on the median number, but the more important signal is usually the direction of travel underneath it.

There is also an awkward contradiction in the Fed’s projections. Alongside the higher inflation forecast, officials appear to have lifted their 2026 GDP growth forecast to 2.4%. That leaves markets trying to reconcile stronger growth, firmer inflation, and the continued suggestion of future easing.

Under normal macro conditions, that combination would usually argue for rates staying steady or restrictive for longer, not for keeping a cut alive. The Fed appears to be assuming that the economy can absorb higher energy costs without much damage and that inflation will cool again quickly enough to justify easing later on. Markets may be less willing to make that same assumption.

That is why the deeper takeaway from the meeting is not really about the single projected cut. It is about the quiet return of a higher-for-longer policy bias. The Fed does not want to sound aggressively hawkish while sentiment is already fragile, but its own projections are starting to lean that way. If oil remains elevated and inflation does not ease, that one cut could easily disappear from the outlook altogether.

This is what makes this week important across markets. Traders are now testing whether the Fed’s balancing act can hold. In USDX, resistance is sitting near 100.00, where a break higher would strengthen the higher-for-longer narrative. In EURUSD, downside focus remains around 1.1475.

In US Oil, a break and hold above 99.284 could open the way toward 112.20. In XAUUSD, the market is reacting around support after the break of 4402.73, with another lower leg possible below 4169. In the SP500, the key level is 6517, with bearish rebound zones at 6600 and 6750. In BTCUSD, rebound focus is near 70550, where rejection would keep the structure fragile.

Find out why the Fed’s rate path is coming under closer scrutiny and how it could shape moves in the dollar, oil, equities, gold, and Bitcoin in this article.

Source: https://www.vtmarkets.com/week_ahead/week-ahead-feds-dot-plot-faces-a-reality-check/?utm_source=FinanceMagnates&utm_medium=advertorial&utm_campaign=fed&utm_content=na&utm_term=na&rt=Organic_content_FinanceMagnates&ls=NA
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