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With multiple rate hikes priced into the curve, the market has reached peak hawkishness. This creates an asymmetric opportunity where a bet against hikes can win even if the Fed does nothing. A flat policy would lead to a "passive ease" as priced-in hikes are removed from the curve.

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The market is focused on inflation, but a deteriorating job market combined with high real rates could trigger a disinflationary spiral. Because the Fed is scarred by recent inflation, its response will be too slow, increasing the disproportionate chance that rates on the front end will have to return to zero to combat the downturn.

Despite strong economic data suggesting the Fed should hold rates, markets are pricing 40-50 basis points of cuts. This discrepancy is driven by political uncertainty around the appointment of a new Fed Chair, as the administration's focus on lower rates makes it difficult for markets to price out easing until the new leadership is confirmed.

The market believes the Fed is more likely to ease on weak data than tighten on strong data. This perceived asymmetry in its reaction function effectively cuts off the 'negative tail risk' for global growth, making high-yielding emerging market carry trades a particularly favorable strategy in the current environment.

Despite conflicting inflation data, the Federal Reserve feels compelled to cut interest rates. With markets pricing in a 96% probability of a cut, failing to do so would trigger a significant stock market shock. This makes managing market expectations a primary driver of the policy decision, potentially overriding pure economic rationale.

The recent FOMC meeting featured three hawkish dissents arguing to remove the easing bias. This signals a growing consensus within the committee that the next rate move could just as easily be a hike as a cut, a significant change in the market's outlook.

The market is pricing in approximately three more rate cuts for next year, totaling around 110 basis points. However, J.P. Morgan's analysis, supported by the Fed's own dot plot, suggests only one additional cut is likely, indicating that current market pricing for easing is too aggressive.

The upcoming FOMC meeting is a crucial inflection point. A rate cut will focus investors on the timing of subsequent cuts. A hold will pivot the conversation to whether the easing cycle is over and if rate hikes could return in 2026, dramatically impacting Treasury markets.

Even if US inflation remains stubbornly high, the US dollar's potential to appreciate is capped by the Federal Reserve's asymmetric reaction function. The Fed is operating under a risk management framework where it is more inclined to ease on economic weakness than to react hawkishly to firm inflation, limiting terminal rate repricing.

A high-conviction view for 2026 is a material steepening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve. This shift will not be driven by long-term rates, but by the two-year yield falling as markets more accurately price in future Federal Reserve rate cuts.

The market's "run it hot" narrative assumes supportive monetary policy, but the Fed is unlikely to cut rates before the current chair's term potentially ends. With a new chair possible in June, this creates a four-month window where the Fed may not ease, creating a "liquidity pocket" and risk for markets.