Fed turns hawkish—rate hikes replace cuts as S&P 500 drops and yields surge

Yesterday, the Fed left rates unchanged, as expected. The surprise was its new forecast: nine of the eighteen officials now expect a rate hike this year, instead of the cuts the market hoped for at the start of 2026. New chair Kevin Warsh repeated one line again and again: "The Fed will deliver price stability." His message was simple. Beating inflation comes first, even if it means higher rates.
Markets moved fast. The S&P 500 fell more than 1% to around 7,420, the dollar had its best day in almost a year, and bond yields jumped to a one-year high. Higher rates make borrowing more expensive and make bonds more appealing than shares, so the big tech names led the drop. Today, the index trades near 7,487 as it digests the news.
One more change matters. Warsh dropped the usual hints about future moves, so the market now reacts to data more than to Fed promises. That means bigger moves around important reports like jobs and inflation. US markets are also closed on Friday, so trading may be thinner and less stable than usual.
S&P 500 key levels:
Watching: US data for rate-hike clues, the dollar and bond yields, oil prices, and the Iran deal.
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