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While equities had a mixed reaction to inflation data, the bond market shows clearer concern. FedWatch data reveals a significant shift in expectations over the past month, with the probability of a 25 basis point rate hike by year-end rising to 30%, while the probability of a cut has diminished.

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A significant disconnect is emerging between Fed policy and inflation data. The Federal Reserve is signaling a dovish shift, prioritizing labor market risks and viewing inflation as transitory, even as forecasts show both headline and core inflation accelerating into the fourth quarter.

The Federal Reserve is tightening policy just as forward-looking inflation indicators are pointing towards a significant decline. This pro-cyclical move, reacting to lagging data from a peak inflation print, is a "classic Fed error" that unnecessarily tightens financial conditions and risks derailing the economy.

When bond prices exhibit short-term mean reversion (up one day, down the next), it's a quantitative sign of deep uncertainty. This reflects the market and the Fed struggling to choose between fighting inflation and addressing weakening employment, leading to no clear trend until one indicator decisively breaks out.

While investors often watch equity markets for signs of Fed intervention, rising bond volatility poses a more significant risk to financial conditions. This makes the Fed more sensitive to instability in the bond market, meaning a spike there could trigger a dovish policy shift sooner than a stock market downturn.

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 yield curve is poised to steepen, similar to the 1970s OPEC-1 shock. Markets anticipate the incoming Fed chair will be dovish, like Arthur Burns was, and avoid hiking short-term rates into a supply-driven inflation shock. This will cause long-term inflation expectations and yields to rise faster than short-term rates.

The bond market will become volatile not when rates hit a certain number, but when the market perceives the Fed's cutting cycle has ended and the next move could be a hike. This "legitimate pause" will cause a rapid, painful steepening of the yield curve.

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 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.

The Federal Reserve can tolerate inflation running above its 2% target as long as long-term inflation expectations remain anchored. This is the critical variable that gives them policy flexibility. The market's belief in the Fed's long-term credibility is what matters most.