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In a shift, one Fed policymaker sees a rate hike ahead

By Thomson Reuters Mar 18, 2026 | 1:18 PM

By Ann Saphir

WASHINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) – After two-and-a-half years of consensus at the Federal Reserve that the central bank’s next move on interest rates will be downward, one Fed ​policymaker on Wednesday penciled in a rate hike for next ‌year.

The forecast is in the minority: the bulk of Fed policymakers still see the next move as a cut this year, as they did in December.

But as the Iran War and the sharply higher oil prices it has brought ‌stretch ​into a third week, the lone forecast ⁠for higher short-term borrowing ⁠costs next year suggests a possible debate over whether the battle against five years of above-target inflation can be won without a reversal on rates.

And in another under-the-hood indication of a more-hawkish- ​leaning Fed, even the most dovish policymaker expects a percentage-point of cuts this year, compared with 1.5 percentage points seen as ⁠of December. Fed Governor Stephen Miran, who ⁠dissented on Wednesday’s decision to leave interest-rates steady ​in the 3.5%-3.75% range, has said he is the Fed’s most dovish ​policymaker.

For this year, seven of the Fed’s 19 policymakers see ‌rates unchanged at year end. Seven others felt one quarter-point rate cut would be needed this year, while five felt at least two would be necessary.

Projections published Wednesday show central bankers as a ⁠group have become more pessimistic about inflation in recent months.

Inflation by the personal consumption expenditures price index, expected in December to ease to 2.4% ⁠at year end, is ‌now seen at 2.7%, based on the median ⁠policymaker view. The Fed targets 2%.

Core PCE inflation, ​which ‌strips out volatile oil and food prices, is ​now also seen ⁠hitting 2.7%, compared with 2.5% previously.

The unemployment rate is still projected at 4.4% by year-end, matching the forecast from December and the actual reading in February. GDP growth is seen at 2.4% this year, better than the 2.3% forecast as of December.

(Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing ​by Andrea Ricci)