Fed Rate Cut Expectations Shift After CPI: What It Means for Markets
Markets enter the new week adjusting to shifting Federal Reserve rate cut expectations after January’s softer-than-expected CPI print and a mixed labour report. Headline inflation cooled to 2.4% year on year, but core pressures remain elevated, keeping policymakers cautious. While job gains exceeded forecasts, heavy downward revisions to prior data point to underlying softness in the labour market.
As a result, traders now lean toward a mid-year Fed rate cut rather than early easing. Fed funds futures suggest steady rates in the near term, with markets closely watching upcoming PPI and labour data for confirmation.
This recalibration is driving cross-asset volatility. Gold (XAUUSD) is pressing into resistance as easing bets gain traction. The US Dollar Index (USDX) is testing key levels as yield expectations shift. Bitcoin (BTCUSD) remains sensitive to broader risk sentiment, while the S&P 500 reacts to evolving policy outlooks and margin expectations.
Adding complexity, geopolitical tensions and legal uncertainty around US tariff authority introduce another layer of macro risk, influencing safe-haven flows and currency positioning.
Read more on how shifting Fed expectations, inflation data and global developments could shape volatility across major markets in the days ahead.
Publication date:
2026-02-23 08:47:43 (GMT)