Pepperstone logo
Pepperstone logo
  • Français
  • English
  • Español
  • Italiano
  • Trading

    Vue d'ensemble

    La tarification

    Caractéristiques de nos Comptes

    Compte CFD Risque Limité

    Comptes de négociation

    Pro

    Heures de négociation

    Calendrier de maintenance

  • Plateformes

    Vue d'ensemble

    Plateformes de négociation

    Intégrations

    Outils de trading

  • Marchés et symboles

    Vue d'ensemble

    Le marché des changes

    Actions

    ETF

    Indices

    Matière Première

    Indices de devises

    Dividendes pour les CFDs sur indices

    Dividendes pour CFDs d'actions

    CFDs à terme

  • Analyse

    Vue d'ensemble

    Naviguer sur les marchés

    Le Daily Fix

    Rencontrez les analystes

  • Apprenez à trader

    Vue d'ensemble

    Guides de trading

    Séminaires en ligne

  • Les partenaires

  • A propos de nous

  • Aide et assistance

  • Professionnel

  • Français
  • English
  • Español
  • Italiano
  • Launch webtrader

  • Trading

  • Plateformes

  • Marchés et symboles

  • Analyse

  • Apprenez à trader

  • Les partenaires

  • A propos de nous

  • Aide et assistance

  • Professionnel

Monetary Policy

Macro Trader: March FOMC Shouldn’t Be A Game Changer

Michael Brown
Michael Brown
Senior Research Strategist
18 mars 2024
Share
While the March FOMC meeting may spark some intra-day, or intra-week, volatility for the financial markets, the decision itself seems unlikely to be a game-changer from a bigger picture perspective, with the broader direction of policy set to remain unchanged, as the policy backdrop remains supportive for risk.

What the FOMC do this week doesn’t really matter in the grand scheme of things.

That’s not to say the decision, and latest Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), won’t be interesting. They will, particularly whether recent hotter-than-expected inflation figures are enough to see a modest upward revision to the PCE/core PCE forecasts and, of course, whether the updated ‘dot plot’ comes with any revisions to the December iteration – chiefly, whether the median ‘dot’ again points to 75bp of cuts being delivered this year.

With that said, it is only a hawkish risk, and not the base case, that either of those two shifts are made. In any case, even if the median 2024 dot is nudged 25bp higher than a quarter ago, it seems unlikely that such an adjustment would be a game-changer in the grand scheme of things, besides causing some short-term vol in front-end rates, and likely also knocking equities lower, and giving the greenback a renewed kick higher.

More broadly, the direction of travel that policy is set to take this year should remain broadly unchanged. While the FOMC will remain in no rush to cut, likely reiterating a need to maintain restriction until ‘confident’ that inflation is on its way back towards the 2% target. In other words, continuing to play a data-dependent waiting game.

Of course, this data has been somewhat mixed of late. Headline inflation is beginning to trend in a worrying direction, with CPI having printed hotter-than-expected for three months running, and seemingly having found a floor around 3% YoY. Supercore inflation (services, ex-housing) is also moving in the wrong direction, having remained north of 4% YoY for two months running. While disinflation continues – with February core CPI continuing a streak of monthly declines that begun in mid-2023 – the process is clearly much slower, and much bumpier, than policymakers would desire.

Preview

The rationale behind a wish to be patient in firing the starting gun on the easing cycle is being borne out in current data, with the ‘last mile’ back to 2% increasingly looking like the most difficult.

At the same time, while headline payrolls growth remains resilient, with the 3-month average of job gains sitting at +265k, the highest since last June, signs are beginning to emerge that the labour market may be beginning to rollover – unemployment surprisingly rose to 3.9% last month, while participation remains somewhat shy of the cycle highs seen in Q4 23, at 62.5%.

The problem for policymakers is that it is still too early to tell whether what we are looking at here are data anomalies, or data trends. Naturally, a couple more months’ worth of figures will be needed in order to confidently answer those open questions.

We remain, then, in something of a monetary policy purgatory, and likely will no matter the outcome of the March FOMC meeting. The direction that monetary policy is set to take this year should remain unchanged – cuts are on the way, and an end to quantitative tightening is also due shortly, with both likely to begin in the summer, probably in June.

Preview

Importantly, this is a data-dependent waiting game that will play out with the FOMC sat, ready and waiting, to act if they see a need – either due to a sudden turn in the labour market, more rapid than expected disinflation, or some kind of financial accident.

In other words, while markets continue to hang on every remark that FOMC members make in public, the Fed put remains in place, leaving an insurance policy for both markets, and the economy more broadly. This should, in turn, continue to underpin risk, and allow dips to be well-bought and limited in magnitude, with investors again confident that the Fed ‘has their backs’.

Put simply, what matters is not what the Fed do this week, or even exactly when they do eventually deliver the first rate cut. What matters is the broader path that policy will take this year; i.e., a looser stance, coupled with the optionality to deliver more aggressive support if it proves necessary. Two powerful factors that should limit the extent of equity downside for some time to come, and keep the path of least resistance leading higher.


Related articles

A Traders’ Weekly Playbook: Long event risk, short sleep

A Traders’ Weekly Playbook: Long event risk, short sleep

NVIDIA
Market Events
March 2024 BoE Preview: A Placeholder After February’s Pivot

March 2024 BoE Preview: A Placeholder After February’s Pivot

Monetary Policy
GBP
March 2024 FOMC Preview: No Rush To Cut

March 2024 FOMC Preview: No Rush To Cut

FOMC
BoJ meeting Playbook – a landmine for the JPY but no game-changer

BoJ meeting Playbook – a landmine for the JPY but no game-changer

BoJ
Pepperstone doesn’t represent that the material provided here is accurate, current or complete, and therefore shouldn’t be relied upon as such. The information provided here, whether from a third party or not, isn’t to be considered as a recommendation; or an offer to buy or sell; or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security, financial product or instrument; or to participate in any particular trading strategy. We advise any readers of this content to seek their own advice. Without the approval of Pepperstone, reproduction or redistribution of this information isn’t permitted.

Autres sites

  • The Trade Off
  • Partenaires
  • Groupe
  • Carrières

Façons de commercer

  • La tarification
  • Caractéristiques de nos Comptes
  • Comptes de négociation
  • Pro
  • Heures de négociation

Plateformes

  • Plateformes de négociation
  • Outils de trading

Marchés et symboles

  • Forex
  • CFD sur actions
  • ETF CFDs
  • CFD Indices
  • Matières premières
  • CFD sur les indices de devises
  • CFD à terme

Analyse

  • Naviguer sur les marchés
  • Le Daily Fix
  • Rencontrez les analystes

Apprenez à trader

  • Guides de trading
  • Vidéos
  • Séminaires en ligne
Pepperstone logo
support@pepperstone.com
+44 (800) 0465473
195, Makarios III Avenue, Neocleous House,
3030, Limassol Cyprus
  • Documentation juridique
  • Politique de confidentialité
  • Conditions générales d’utilisation du site Internet
  • Politique en matière de cookies

© 2025 Pepperstone EU Limited
Company Number ΗΕ 398429 | Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission Licence Number 388/20

Avertissement sur les risques : Les CFD sont des instruments complexes et comportent un risque élevé de perte d'argent rapide en raison de l'effet de levier. 75.3% des comptes des investisseurs particuliers perdent de l'argent lorsqu'ils négocient des CFD. Vous devez vous demander si vous comprenez le fonctionnement des CFD et si vous pouvez vous permettre de prendre le risque élevé de perdre votre argent.

Les transactions sur le Compte CFD Risque Limité sont un type de transaction avec effet de levier et avec un stop loss garanti lié à chaque position. Ces produits présentent un caractère spéculatif et un risque élevé de perte totale du capital investi.


La négociation de produits dérivés est risquée. Il ne convient pas à tout le monde et, dans le cas des clients professionnels, vous pouvez perdre beaucoup plus que votre investissement initial. Vous ne possédez pas ou n'avez pas de droits sur les actifs sous-jacents. Les performances passées ne préjugent pas des performances futures et les lois fiscales sont susceptibles de changer. Les informations contenues dans ce site sont de nature générale et ne tiennent pas compte de vos objectifs personnels, de votre situation financière ou de vos besoins. Veuillez lire nos documents juridiques et vous assurer que vous comprenez parfaitement les risques avant de prendre toute décision de trading. Nous vous encourageons à demander un avis indépendant.

Pepperstone EU Limited est une société à responsabilité limitée enregistrée à Chypre sous le numéro ΗΕ 398429. Elle est autorisée et réglementée par la Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (numéro de licence 388/20). Siège social : 195, Makarios III Avenue, Neocleous House, 3030, Limassol, Chypre.

Les informations contenues dans ce site ne sont pas destinées aux résidents de la Belgique ou des États-Unis, ni à une utilisation par une personne dans un pays ou une juridiction où une telle distribution ou utilisation serait contraire à la législation ou à la réglementation locale.