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Macro Score 72 Bearish

Core PCE Breach of 3% Signals Potential Pivot Toward Rate Hikes

Apr 10, 2026 11:15 UTC
^GSPC
Medium term

U.S. inflation data shows the core PCE index rising to 3.1%, the first upside break of the 3% threshold since 2021. This trend, coupled with geopolitical instability, may force the Federal Reserve to abandon its easing cycle.

  • Core PCE reached 3.1%, breaking a multi-year trend
  • Fed's dual mandate of price stability and full employment is under pressure
  • Strait of Hormuz tensions pose a systemic risk to energy and fertilizer prices
  • Previous rate hikes from 0.1% to 5.3% led to a significant market correction
  • Analysts forecast a potential return to hiking by late 2027

The Federal Reserve's battle against inflation faces a new challenge as the core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index has climbed to an annualized rate of 3.1%. This marks the first time the metric has broken above the 3% barrier to the upside since April 2021, threatening the central bank's long-term 2% stability target. After a series of six rate cuts since September 2024, the recent two-month uptick in core PCE suggests that previous progress may be stalling. The shift is prompting Wall Street analysts to reconsider their forecasts, with some now factoring in the possibility of future interest rate hikes to curb persistent price pressures. Supply chain vulnerabilities in the Middle East are exacerbating the risk. With a significant portion of the world's oil, natural gas, and fertilizer passing through the Strait of Hormuz, any prolonged standstill in shipping could trigger a spike in consumer prices, mirroring the inflationary shocks seen in 2022 when core PCE exceeded 5%. Historical data underscores the risk to equities; the last aggressive hiking cycle between March 2022 and August 2023 saw the S&P 500 enter bear territory with a decline exceeding 20%. Higher rates typically constrain corporate growth by increasing borrowing costs and dampening consumer demand. While some economists, including J.P. Morgan's Michael Feroli, suggest the Fed may hold rates steady through 2026, the trajectory points toward a potential hike by late 2027 if inflation remains stubborn.

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