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The Fed Just Admitted It Has No Idea When Inflation Stops, and Markets Called Them on It

Staff Writer
June 16, 2026

Powell walked into Wednesday's press conference with one job: convince the market that the Fed had inflation under control. He left it having convinced nobody, least of all himself.

The Fed held rates steady at 5.25 to 5.50 percent, which nobody expected them to do otherwise. But Powell spent forty minutes threading a needle that doesn't exist. He said inflation remains "elevated." He said the Fed has "more confidence" it's moving toward 2 percent. Then he hinted—barely concealed—that rate cuts could start "at some point." Investors heard the word "could" and immediately sold bonds, reading it as admission that the Fed doesn't know when to stop.

Here's the thing Powell won't say out loud: the Fed doesn't actually have a hard number anymore. They're not watching inflation tick down to 2 percent and pulling a lever. They're watching three different inflation measures, core inflation, sticky services inflation, and shelter costs that refuse to budge. When Powell says "more confidence," he means they've convinced themselves that their models might work eventually, which is different from knowing they work now.

The two-year Treasury yield jumped forty basis points. That's not noise. That's the bond market telling Powell that his confidence sounds like hope dressed up as data.

What happens next matters more than what happened Wednesday. If inflation rolls over to 2.5 percent in the next jobs report, Powell cuts rates and looks prescient. If it sticks at 3.2 percent—where it sits now—he faces a choice between looking hawkish or reckless. He'll split the difference, probably. Cut by a quarter point. Say something about "data-dependent decisions." Confuse everyone again.

The real sleeper story nobody's talking about: Treasury markets are now pricing in six rate cuts by the end of 2024. That's not what Powell said. That's what traders think will happen because they don't believe Powell either. When the Fed loses credibility, markets move first and ask permission later.

Powell spent his entire career studying how central banks can talk markets into behaving. Turns out you have to know where you're going first.

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