Home Latest Insights | News U.S. Federal Reserve Holds its Benchmark FED Funds Rate at Range 3.5% to 3.75% 

U.S. Federal Reserve Holds its Benchmark FED Funds Rate at Range 3.5% to 3.75% 

U.S. Federal Reserve Holds its Benchmark FED Funds Rate at Range 3.5% to 3.75% 

The Federal Reserve announced that it is holding its benchmark federal funds rate steady at a target range of 3.5% to 3.75%.

This marks the second consecutive meeting in 2026 where the FOMC has paused rate changes, following three 25-basis-point cuts late in 2025 (September, October, and December). The decision was made by an 11-1 vote, with Governor Stephen Miran dissenting in favor of a 25-basis-point cut.

The Fed cited solid economic expansion, a labor market showing some softening with job gains described as low, persistent inflation above the 2% target, and heightened uncertainty largely due to the ongoing U.S.-Israeli war with Iran, which has driven surges in oil prices and broader economic risks.

In its updated Summary of Economic Projections including the “dot plot” of individual policymakers’ rate expectations, the median forecast remains unchanged from December 2025: officials still anticipate just one 25-basis-point rate cut in 2026. This would bring the target range to approximately 3.25%-3.5% by year-end.

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Projections for subsequent years also held steady, with another single cut expected in 2027 bringing rates toward 3.0%-3.25% by end-2027 and stability around 3.1% in the longer run. Key updates to other projections include: Slightly higher GDP growth for 2026; median now 2.4%, up from 2.3% in December.

Unemployment steady at 4.4% for 2026 then dipping to 4.3% in 2027. Inflation forecasts ticked higher due to energy price pressures: PCE inflation at 2.7% for 2026 up from 2.4% and core PCE also at 2.7% up from 2.5%. Fed Chair Jerome Powell emphasized caution in post-meeting remarks, noting progress on inflation but not as rapid as hoped, with risks from geopolitical factors potentially delaying easing.

The ongoing 2026 Iran war which began February 28 with U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iranian targets, including the killing of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei has triggered one of the largest oil supply shocks in decades. Iran sits on the Strait of Hormuz — the chokepoint for roughly 20% of global seaborne oil and LNG — and has retaliated with missile/drone attacks, threats to sink tankers, and strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure.

This has effectively halted or severely disrupted tanker traffic, damaged Iranian export terminals; Kharg Island, which handles ~90% of Iran’s crude, and spread risk to nearby producers. Pre-war baseline (late 2025/early 2026): Brent crude hovered in the mid-$60s to low $70s.

Immediate reaction (late Feb/early March): +7–13% in single sessions, quickly pushing Brent into the high $70s–low $80s. More than 25–50%+ overall, with Brent now trading in the $108–116 range. Brief spike past $82, then $91, then over $100 within days/weeks.

Goldman Sachs noted an added ~$14/bbl “risk premium” just from Hormuz uncertainty. ~1/5 of global oil flows stopped or rerouted; Iran’s own exports; pre-war ~3–3.5 mbpd largely offline; secondary effects on Iraq and Gulf shipping. Insurers pulled coverage; rates skyrocketed; tankers diverted or idled.

Even short disruptions trigger long-term hedging and speculative buying. Higher energy costs feed directly into PCE as the Fed highlighted in its March 18 meeting, with U.S. gasoline up ~$0.43/gallon in a week and UK petrol/diesel rising 4–8p/litre.

 

Governments including the U.S. are releasing emergency strategic reserves; spare capacity and alternative pipelines are partially offsetting losses. If the war drags on: Analysts warn of $100–120+ sustained levels, or worse if Hormuz stays closed for weeks. A quick ceasefire could see prices fall 20–30% rapidly.

Higher input costs for airlines, shipping, manufacturing; stock-market volatility; and added pressure on central banks explaining the Fed’s cautious “one-cut” 2026 outlook. In short, the war has already added a massive risk premium and physical supply crunch that is visibly showing up at the pump and in inflation forecasts.

Markets remain highly sensitive to every new strike or diplomatic signal — exactly why the Fed cited “heightened uncertainty” from this conflict in its latest statement. The situation is fluid; any de-escalation or further escalation will move prices sharply. Jerome indicated the Fed remains data-dependent and prepared to adjust if conditions shift, though no hikes are currently projected.

Markets had largely priced in a hold, with futures reflecting low odds of near-term cuts and some debate about whether even one cut materializes in 2026 given the uncertainties. The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for April 28-29, 2026.

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