|

USD: Energy shock and hawkish Fed support – BBH

Brown Brothers Harriman’s Elias Haddad highlights that an escalating Iran war-driven energy shock, combined with a restrictive Federal Reserve and tightening bias at other central banks, is pressuring risk assets and supporting the Dollar. The FOMC delivered a hawkish hold, slashing rate cut expectations and nudging projections and the longer-term rate higher, keeping easing prospects limited.

Energy shock and Fed stance back Dollar

"Brent crude oil prices and natural gas prices in Europe spiked as the Iran war has escalated into additional direct strikes on energy infrastructure. An energy shock with no end in sight, a Fed staying restrictive, and other central banks on the cusp of tightening into soggy growth are a brutal combo for risk assets. Stocks and bonds are selling off while USD risk is skewed to the upside."

"FOMC delivered a hawkish hold yesterday. Fed funds futures slashed rate cut expectations from -60bps before the start of the Iran war on February 27 to just -9bps in the next twelve months."

"The FOMC reiterated that “uncertainty about the economic outlook remains elevated” but the updated economic projections downplay risk of stagflation. Real GDP growth was revised higher across the forecast horizon, reflecting confidence in productivity. Headline and core PCE inflation were both raised to 2.7% for 2026 but still converges to 2.0% by 2028."

"The dot plots continue to imply one cut for both 2026 and 2027, no change in 2028. But the distribution of dots for 2027 and 2028 tilted slightly more hawkish. The longer-term rate was raised to 3.125% vs 3.0% in December, which was in line with consensus."

"Finally, Fed Chair Jay Powell strongly suggested a high bar to resume easing stressing three key points: (i) “Fed sees current stance of policy as appropriate”, (ii) Think it’s important to keep rates mildly restrictive”, (iii) “Possibility that next move might be hike did come up.”"

(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)

Author

FXStreet Insights Team

The FXStreet Insights Team is a group of journalists that handpicks selected market observations published by renowned experts. The content includes notes by commercial as well as additional insights by internal and external analysts.

More from FXStreet Insights Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

GBP/USD bounces off lows, back above 1.3200

After bottoming out near 1.3160, GBP/USD manages to regain a bit of shine and reclaim the 1.3200 mark and beyond at the end of the week. Stronger-than-expected UK Retail Sales data seem to be helping the British Pound limit its losses, while the chaotic UK political environment keeps the bulls at bay for now.

EUR/USD looks consolidative around 1.1460

EUR/USD stages a modest rebound after slipping to a three-month low below 1.1420 at the end of the week. That said, the pair now looks to consolidate humble gains just above 1.1460 despite growing uncertainty surrounding the next round of US-Iran negotiations, which keeps the US Dollar’s downside contained.

Gold slips back to six-day lows, targets $4,100

Gold retreats for the third consecutive day on Friday, eroding gains seen in the first half of the week and approaching the key $4,100 mark per troy ounce. Indeed, the precious metal continues to face headwinds from the Fed's hawkish stance and renewed uncertainty surrounding the next round of US-Iran negotiations.

Solana extends correction despite ETF inflows, RWA adoption

Solana (SOL) price edges below $70 extending its losses for the fourth straight day this week. The institutional demand for Solana is building, with steady inflows so far this week and Morgan Stanley’s amended S-1 filing for a Solana-focused Exchange-Traded Fund.

The Iran war didn't break the US economy, but what happens next?

Nearly four months after the start of the Iran war, the US economy remains remarkably resilient. While the conflict initially triggered a severe disruption to global energy markets and a sharp rise in Oil prices, recent diplomatic progress between Washington and Tehran has eased concerns about a prolonged supply shock.

Regime change: Inside Kevin Warsh's first move to make the Fed unreadable on purpose

The rate did not move. That was the least interesting thing about Kevin Warsh's first meeting in charge of the Fed. The FOMC held its benchmark at 3.50%-3.75% for the fourth straight meeting, exactly as priced, and then the new chair used his first press conference to dismantle the machinery the market has leaned on for a decade.