After five years of tolerating inflation above its 2% target, the Federal Reserve appears to be running out of patience and Wall Street is starting to take notice.
Bank of America made a striking call this week: the Fed will raise interest rates three times before the end of 2026, pushing the benchmark rate from its current 3.5%–3.75% range up to 4.25%–4.5%. That’s a sharp reversal from BofA’s previous forecast, which had rates staying flat all year.
How We Got Here
It wasn’t that long ago that the Fed was cutting rates. In December 2025, policymakers lowered the federal funds rate by a quarter point as job data softened and officials believed Trump’s tariffs would have only temporary inflationary effects. The plan was to hold steady and see.
Then things changed — fast.
The labor market bounced back stronger than expected. The U.S. war with Iran sent oil prices surging. And inflation, rather than cooling, got measurably worse. Core PCE (the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge) is on pace to hit 3.5% — nearly 70 basis points higher than a year ago. Housing-driven disinflation, which had been quietly helping keep prices in check, has largely run its course. Other core services? Still very sticky.
In short: the Fed’s best-case scenario didn’t play out.
The Warsh Factor
New Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh has added a hawkish edge to all of this. At the June FOMC meeting, half of policymakers penciled in rate hikes — even without expecting unemployment to fall. That’s unusual. Typically, the Fed tightens when the labor market is running too hot. The fact that officials are considering hikes regardless suggests a harder line on inflation itself.
Warsh also made a candid admission at his press briefing: it’s hard to call monetary policy “restrictive” while watching Wall Street raise trillions in new stock and debt offerings. Financial conditions, he suggested, aren’t quite as tight as the rate numbers imply.
BofA now sees the first hike coming in September, with two more following in October and December.
Not Everyone Agrees
To be fair, there’s a credible counterargument. Alpine Macro’s chief global strategist Chen Zhao thinks actual rate hikes are unlikely. His reasoning: if the Iran war winds down, oil could fall back to $50–$60 a barrel, pulling inflation lower with it; small businesses are struggling; AI is boosting productivity; wage growth is cooling.
Zhao’s view is that the inflation spike is mostly transitory and that once these one-off shocks pass, the Fed won’t need to act.
What This Means for You
Markets are already moving. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped this week even as crude oil prices fell. Investors are pricing in a more aggressive Fed.
For consumers and businesses, the stakes are real. Higher rates mean:
- Mortgages and auto loans get more expensive — or stay expensive longer than expected
- Credit card rates stay elevated, squeezing household budgets
- Business borrowing costs rise, potentially slowing hiring and investment
If BofA is right, the brief window of rate relief that opened in late 2025 will close entirely by year’s end.
The Bottom Line
The Fed spent years threading the needle — tolerating above-target inflation while keeping the economy afloat through tariff shocks and global uncertainty. That era may be ending. Whether it’s three hikes or none, the message from policymakers is increasingly clear: inflation has overstayed its welcome, and the Fed’s patience has a limit.
The next few months will tell us whether that limit has been reached.
Sources: Fortune, Bank of America research note, Alpine Macro.
Market analysis provided by The Macro Compass is for informational purposes only. Please consult with a financial advisor before making investment decisions.
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