Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh held his first policy meeting on Wednesday, keeping rates unchanged while signaling the possibility of further hikes later this year. The move marks a shift in central bank stance globally; markets have recalibrated expectations from anticipating two to three Fed rate cuts in 2026 to now pricing in two potential rate hikes.
Despite the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, energy supply chain damage and depleted crude inventories mean longer recovery timelines. Brent crude spot trades near $77 per barrel with December futures at $76, suggesting market skepticism about lasting peace. Major central banks including the ECB, Bank of Japan, and others have also adopted more hawkish positions, with elevated core inflation and resilient economic growth cited as key concerns keeping policy tight.