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Reading: Markets shift back towards potential Fed rate cut this year with Iran ceasefire in place
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Home » Blog » Markets shift back towards potential Fed rate cut this year with Iran ceasefire in place
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Markets shift back towards potential Fed rate cut this year with Iran ceasefire in place

Times Desk
Last updated: April 8, 2026 2:07 pm
Times Desk
Published: April 8, 2026
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A trader works, as a screen broadcasts a press conference by U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell following the Fed rate announcement, on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, U.S., March 18, 2026.

Brendan McDermid | Reuters

Traders are entertaining the possibility of an interest rate cut by the end of the year now that the U.S. and Iran have agreed to a cease fire.

Odds for a reduction jumped Wednesday morning, hitting about 43%, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which uses 30-day fed funds futures contracts to compute market expectations for moves by the Federal Reserve.

Market pricing is implying a 3.5% rate in December for the overnight borrowing benchmark, compared to the current effective level of 3.64%.

Prior to the announcement, market-implied odds for a cut were just 14%.

Traders had expected the Fed would be hesitant to cut this year as the Iran conflict had sent energy prices skyrocketing, threatening the central bank’s efforts to get inflation back to its 2% goal. Previous to that, markets had expected multiple cuts this year in an effort to shore up the plodding labor market.

With at least a fragile peace in Iran, sentiment began tilting back toward the probability for a cut.

“The market is now discounting a clear skew to one cut from the Fed this year,” Krishna Guha, head of global policy and central bank strategy at Evercore ISI, said in a note. “Assuming a flawed deal likely will be reached, this repricing has more to go, with the looming inflation shock now much less likely to threaten inflation expectations.”

Guha sees rate cuts in play for the Fed’s global peers including the Bank of England, European Central bank and Bank of Japan.

In the U.S., markets this week will get data that will provide two perspectives on inflation.

The Commerce Department on Thursday will release the personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred gauge, that will show where inflation was in February, prior to the Middle East war. Then on Friday, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the consumer price index for March, which will reflect the price impact from the hostilities.

Economists expect the PCE report to show headline inflation at 3% and core, which excludes food and energy, at 2.8%, according to the Dow Jones consensus. For the CPI, the respective readings for March are pegged at 3.3% and 2.7%, with the all-items level reflecting the war-induced energy price increases.

Guha stressed that the chances for a lasting peace with Iran are still in flux, and said he expects generally cautious tones from policymakers in coming months

“Then, provided that incoming information is reassuring, will shift back more dovish potentially from the late summer onwards, with scope for one, possibly two cuts later in the year,” he said.

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