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Citadel Securities Says The Fed's Next Move Is A Rate Hike

Published Jun 8, 2026
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Summary:
  • Citadel Securities says the Fed may be forced to raise interest rates "soon" to fight inflation.
  • The firm points to a strong job market, high energy prices, and heavy AI spending as the drivers.
  • Strong U.S. jobs data has already pushed global stocks and bonds lower.

For two years, Wall Street bet the Fed would cut rates. One of the world's biggest trading firms just flipped that bet.

Citadel Securities now says the next move is up, not down. Money managers are paying attention.

The Call

Citadel Securities is a giant in buying and selling stocks and bonds. When it talks, big investors listen.

Its message is blunt. The Fed may need to hike rates soon, because inflation is now the bigger threat.

"The next move from the Fed is most likely a hike," wrote Nohshad Shah. He runs part of the firm's bond sales.

That breaks sharply from what most investors expect. It is why the note landed with a jolt.

Citadel's view is simple. Inflation, not a weak job market, is now the greater risk.

The firm also says the Fed's rate sits near neutral right now. That means it neither speeds up nor slows down the economy.

We explain what calls like this mean for your portfolio every morning in Market Briefs - five minutes a day, and a free investing masterclass comes with it.

Three Fires Burning At Once

Why the worry? Three things are heating the economy at once.

The job market is strong. That can push wages, and prices, higher.

Energy costs are up because of the Iran conflict. AI spending is pouring in on top of that.

Citadel says the recent oil jump set off the biggest burst of inflation since 2023. That pushed the issue back to the top of the list.

Picture three space heaters in one small room. Any one is fine, but all three at once and it gets hot fast.

The Pressure On A New Fed Chair

The call puts a spotlight on Fed Chair Kevin Warsh. President Trump picked him partly in hopes of avoiding hikes.

Citadel says hiring still looks healthy. One early read points to 170,000 to 180,000 new jobs a month, and that pace can keep wages climbing.

Trump has pushed hard for lower rates, not higher ones. So a hike would be an awkward turn for the chair he chose.

Markets Are Starting To Listen

The shift is already in prices. Strong jobs numbers recently sent stocks and bonds lower around the world.

Bond traders see almost no chance of a hike before late October. But they now see a quarter-point hike as nearly certain by early next year.

Government bond yields have jumped since late winter too. That is another sign the bond market sees a hotter economy.

A hike would be rare. The Fed has leaned toward cuts for years, so this would mark a real change.

Worth Noting

For years, "lower rates are coming" was the safe bet. Citadel just put real weight behind the opposite.

If the firm is right, a lot of portfolios are set up for the wrong move.

If you want Wall Street decoded before you've finished breakfast, join the Market Briefs newsletter and get a free 45-minute course on finding investments too.

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