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The Fed Just Admitted Its Math Was Wrong, and Nobody Cared

Staff Writer
June 1, 2026

Here's what happened: Fed Chair Jerome Powell sat before Congress and essentially confessed that the central bank has been operating on outdated assumptions about how inflation behaves. Specifically, they thought certain price pressures would persist longer than they have. Core inflation—the stuff economists care about when they strip out food and energy—has cooled faster than officials predicted in their December projections. This isn't minor. The Fed's entire rate-hiking campaign rests on accurate inflation forecasting.

Powell's solution? Patience. Wait and see before cutting rates. Which is bureaucrat-speak for "we don't know what we're doing, so we'll move slowly." Fair enough. But what bothered me wasn't the admission. It was the market's response: nothing. Equities stayed flat. Bonds didn't move. The dollar held steady. Wall Street has stopped believing the Fed has any real control over this economy, and that's where we should focus our worry.

Why This Matters: If markets don't believe the Fed, then the Fed's primary tool—managing expectations—evaporates. When Powell says rates will stay higher for longer, traders no longer adjust their behavior accordingly. They just shrug. That means the next shock, whether it's another banking crisis or a geopolitical incident, hits an economy where the Fed's hand is already tied. You can't cut rates to fight recession if everyone's convinced you won't actually do it.

The inflation data itself does look better. Used car prices, which spiked absurdly in 2021, have normalized. Shipping costs have crashed. Wage growth is cooling. These are real improvements, not tricks. But Powell and his colleagues deserve criticism for one thing: they spent eighteen months insisting inflation was "transitory" when internal Fed models showed otherwise. Those models existed. Staffers ran them. Leadership chose the rosier narrative anyway.

So now we're in a weird spot. Inflation's actually retreating toward the Fed's 2 percent target, which sounds like victory. Except nobody in the market believes it'll stay there, so nobody's pricing in rate cuts. That means borrowing stays expensive. That means businesses hold off on investment. That means employment growth eventually slows. The Fed gets vindication on inflation but potentially engineers the very recession they were trying to avoid—just slower and messier.

What's Coming: Watch the jobs reports for the next two months. If unemployment starts ticking up while inflation holds steady, Powell will face pressure to cut rates fast. That's when market confidence either snaps back or cracks completely. Right now, we're in the tension between those two outcomes, and nobody's talking about it because the day-to-day noise drowns everything out.

Scoop's Kicker: The Fed admitted it was wrong, and the market said "we already knew that"—which is worse than any rate hike could ever be.

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