#FedRateHikeExpectationsResurface



Nobody actually saw this coming in quite this way. Three weeks ago, rate cut expectations were still the dominant consensus — traders were pricing in multiple cuts across 2026, financial media was debating whether the Fed would move in March or wait until summer, and the crypto market was riding that dovish sentiment with Bitcoin holding above $74,000. Then everything changed.

The Iran conflict that started on February 28 reset the macro conversation entirely. For the first couple of weeks, markets shrugged it off. Oil climbed, geopolitical uncertainty spiked, but the assumption was that the Fed would still lean toward easing because labor market concerns hadn't gone away. That assumption got dismantled fast.

By mid-March, Bloomberg was reporting that traders had lifted the probability of a Fed rate hike this year to 50%. Reuters confirmed that market pricing for a hike by September had reached approximately 75%, with better-than-even odds of one arriving as early as July. Polymarket's 2026 Fed rate hike market, which was sitting near zero just weeks earlier, jumped to 24% probability. The 2-year Treasury yield — typically the clearest proxy for near-term rate expectations — began signaling the shift before most commentators caught on.

What flipped the narrative was a combination of factors hitting simultaneously. Energy prices surged with the Iran conflict escalating. Headline inflation risks re-emerged just as the Fed had been engineering a soft landing. And Fed Chair Jerome Powell publicly indicated he no longer believed the risks to the job market were sufficient to outweigh the risks to inflation. That single signal from Powell was enough to accelerate the repricing that had been building quietly in rates markets.

Bank of America economists laid out the conditions that would formally bring hikes back onto the table: Powell's tenure extending beyond current expectations, the unemployment rate staying below 4.5%, and oil-driven inflation spreading into core components. Their economists described an oil price range of roughly $80 to $100 per barrel as the critical "sweet spot" for triggering that scenario — not catastrophic enough to destroy demand, but persistent enough to keep inflation elevated and force the Fed's hand.

The crypto market is not insulated from any of this, and anyone operating as if it is will likely learn that lesson the hard way. The inverse correlation between Fed tightening cycles and crypto asset performance became structurally embedded during the 2022 to 2025 period. Rate hikes reduce global liquidity, increase the opportunity cost of holding risk assets, and push institutional capital toward safer yield — all conditions that historically pressure digital assets. CoinShares head of research James Butterfill acknowledged the short-term pressure crypto would face if hikes materialize. Grayscale's Zach Pandl was more measured, stating that "we are still a long way off from Fed rate hikes," signaling that the base case among major crypto institutions remains that cuts are still the more likely eventual outcome, but the tail risk is real and growing.

Bitcoin had already shown a consistent "sell the news" pattern throughout 2025, falling after seven of eight FOMC meetings regardless of the actual policy outcome. The March meeting held rates steady, as markets expected, yet the surrounding commentary was hawkish enough to rattle positioning. The structural setup now is arguably more fragile than it appears on the surface — rallies may be harder to sustain if every macro data release carries the possibility of reinforcing the hike narrative.

What makes this moment particularly uncomfortable is the speed of the reversal. From near-zero hike probability to 75% market pricing in roughly nine days. Bond markets moved faster than most equity and crypto participants adjusted. That lag between rate market repricing and crypto sentiment repricing is historically where the most painful drawdowns originate — not when the hike actually happens, but when the market finally fully internalizes that the trajectory has changed.

The Fed's official position remains that it will be data-dependent. But the data is now pulling in a direction that no one was positioned for heading into March. Elevated oil, sticky inflation expectations, a labor market that has not broken down meaningfully, and a geopolitical catalyst with no clear resolution timeline. That combination does not guarantee hikes. What it does guarantee is that the conversation about whether the next move is up rather than down is no longer dismissible as a fringe view — it is the conversation the market is actively pricing.

For anyone managing crypto exposure right now, the macro overlay matters more than it has in several months. Volatility risk is repricing upward across the board. The question is not whether this ends with hikes — it may well not. The question is whether the market's current positioning reflects a world where hikes are back on the table. Increasingly, it does not. And that gap is the risk.
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