The Fed didn't hike rates this week. Markets sold off anyway.
That's because of the dot plot, the chart where each Fed member pencils in where they think rates should go - and half the committee just penciled in a hike before the end of 2026. Copper, the metal traders use as a real-time read on the global economy, dropped more than 1% on the news.
What The Dot Plot Said
The Fed held its benchmark rate steady at 3.5% to 3.75% on June 17, in a unanimous 12-0 vote. That part was expected, since it was the fourth straight meeting with no change.
What wasn't expected: 9 of the 18 Fed officials who submitted projections now expect at least one quarter-point hike before the end of 2026. The median projection for the end-of-year fed funds rate climbed to 3.8%, up from 3.4% in the Fed's March outlook.
A "hawk" in Fed speak is someone who wants higher rates to fight inflation. The opposite is a "dove."
The committee's median inflation forecast also moved up sharply, to 3.6% for 2026 from 2.7% in March, with 17 of 18 members saying the risks to inflation are tilted higher. That was the trigger.
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The Chair Didn't Show His Cards
New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, sworn in on May 22 after President Trump nominated him, chaired his first meeting this week. He also did something unusual - he refused to submit his own dot.
Warsh called the dot plot "unhelpful." In plain English, he doesn't want to tip his hand on where he personally thinks rates should be.
That's a strange move for a Fed chair, since the chair's dot is usually the single most-watched number in the projection. Without it, traders are trying to read the most powerful central banker in the world without seeing his hand.
The committee's hawkish lean filled the vacuum. According to CNBC's coverage of the meeting, 2-year Treasury yields jumped roughly 11 basis points right after the projections dropped.
Why Copper Cares
Copper has a nickname on Wall Street: "Dr. Copper." It earned that name because copper goes into almost everything that signals growth - power lines, factories, construction, and electric vehicles.
When traders think the economy is slowing, copper sells off first, because higher rates do two things copper doesn't like. They strengthen the U.S. dollar, which makes copper more expensive for buyers outside the U.S., and they push up borrowing costs, which slows construction, manufacturing, and infrastructure spending.
All of those sectors use a lot of copper. So a Fed leaning toward hiking is a Fed leaning toward slower growth - and copper read the room first.
What To Watch
Rate-hike odds for later this year climbed after the meeting, with money markets fully pricing in a move by October. Stocks pulled back across the board on Wednesday, and even the SpaceX post-IPO rally snapped a four-day streak.
The next Fed meeting is the real test of how serious the hawkish tilt is. Until then, traders will be watching Warsh, not the data.
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