The Fed Meets Today as America Faces Its Ugliest Economic Equation in Years


WASHINGTON, MARCH 17, 2026 —

Key Takeaways

  • The Federal Reserve begins its two-day March meeting today with a 99%+ probability of holding rates at 3.50–3.75%
  • The real story is the dot plot — where officials project rates, inflation, and growth going forward
  • Jerome Powell’s press conference Wednesday will be his most scrutinized in years — and possibly one of his last

The Federal Reserve walks into its most consequential meeting of 2026 on Tuesday morning facing an economic equation that has no clean solution. Oil above $100. Jobs disappearing. Growth slowing. Inflation rising. Two problems, one tool, and a room full of economists who know exactly how bad the math is.

Markets have already decided the outcome: the Fed holds. CME FedWatch data shows a 99%-plus probability the federal funds rate stays at 3.50–3.75% when Chair Jerome Powell steps to the microphone Wednesday afternoon. That part of the story is settled.

Everything else is not.

The Dot Plot That Will Move Markets

Wednesday’s meeting delivers more than just a rate decision. The Fed releases its quarterly Summary of Economic Projections — the dot plot — which shows where each of the 19 FOMC members expects rates, inflation, unemployment, and GDP growth to sit at year’s end.

The December dot plot projected roughly two rate cuts in 2026. That projection is now almost certain to be revised — dramatically.

Economic IndicatorDecember ProjectionCurrent Reality
GDP Growth 2026~2.0%0.7% Q4 2025
Core PCE Inflation~2.3%3.1% and rising
Rate Cuts Expected2 cuts0 cuts priced in
Oil Price Assumed~$75/barrel$100+ per barrel
Jobs Added Feb 2026Positive-92,000 lost

Every single number has moved in the wrong direction since December. The updated dot plot will reflect that — and markets will react accordingly the moment it hits screens at 2:00 PM Eastern Wednesday.

The Stagflation Word Nobody Wants to Say

Goldman Sachs has quietly pushed its first rate cut forecast from June to September — and even that assumes the Iran war ends soon and oil retreats below $80. Bloomberg reports that traders are no longer pricing in even a single cut this year. The Employ America FOMC preview noted the median dot may sit on a knife-edge, with half the committee projecting zero cuts for all of 2026.

The emerging debate is darker still. At least one credible economist has called for the Fed to consider a rate hike — not a cut — to get ahead of the oil-shock inflation surge that could push headline CPI to 3.5% by summer. No major bank has endorsed this position yet. The fact that it is being discussed at all tells you everything about how much the calculus has shifted in three weeks.

Pro Tips a Generic Article Would Miss

Pro Tip 1: Watch the number of dissents Wednesday. Two FOMC members — Governor Stephen Miran and likely either Governor Chris Waller or Governor Miki Bowman — are expected to dissent in favor of a rate cut. Three dissents would be extraordinary and signal serious internal fracture at the Fed.

Pro Tip 2: The dot plot’s 2027 and 2028 projections matter as much as 2026. If officials are penciling in higher rates further out, it signals the committee believes this inflation surge is sticky — not temporary.

Pro Tip 3: Kevin Warsh — Trump’s nominee to replace Powell when his term expires May 15 — is considered more hawkish than Powell. Markets will be listening Wednesday for any language that sounds like a policy preview of the Warsh era.

What This Means For You

If You Have…What the Fed Decision Means
Adjustable rate mortgageRates stay high — no relief coming soon
Credit card debtNo rate cut means no APR reduction
Savings accountHigher rates longer = better savings yield
401(k) / investmentsMarket volatility expected after dot plot release
Car loan shoppingBorrowing costs remain elevated through 2026

The average American won’t watch Powell’s press conference. But by Thursday morning, the rates on their credit cards, the yield on their savings account, and the trajectory of their mortgage will all have been shaped by what happens in Washington on Wednesday afternoon.

Harshit
Harshit

Harshit is a digital journalist covering U.S. news, economics and technology for American readers

Articles: 37