In raising the Fed Funds rate 0.25 percentage-points at their February meeting, the U.S. Federal Reserve (Fed) noted that “ongoing increases will be appropriate” for future rate decisions. That’s in part because the Fed is looking for “substantially more evidence” that inflation is moving lower. It’s a pretty big clue rates are likely going up again in March.
Markets broadly agree but only in the short-term. Markets see a good chance that the Fed raises rates 0.25 percentage-points once again at their March 22 meeting. However, after that, the Fed and markets aren’t aligned.
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