HomeTrading IdeasFOMC Meeting Preview: Will...

FOMC Meeting Preview: Will the Fed Leave the Door Open for a July Cut?

A dovish surprise from the – perhaps a hint that the door remains open to a July or a strong lean toward cutting in September (currently “only” 60% priced in) – could lead to a bullish breakout in

Federal Reserve, FOMC Key Points

  • Traders and economists confidently expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged in the 4.25-4.50% range.
  • The Fed is likely to revise down its full-year GDP growth estimate from 1.7% to closer to 1.3% or 1.4% after a slow Q1.
  • A dovish surprise from the Fed – perhaps a hint that the door remains open to a July rate cut or a strong lean toward cutting in September (currently “only” 60% priced in) – could lead to a bullish breakout in EUR/USD

When is the FOMC Meeting?

The June 2025 FOMC meeting will conclude on Wednesday, June 18th, at 2:00 ET.

Fed Chairman Powell’s press conference will begin at 2:30 ET.

What are the FOMC Interest Rate Expectations?

Traders and economists confidently expect the Fed to leave interest rates unchanged in the 4.25-4.50% range.

As of writing, Fed Funds futures traders are pricing in 99%+ odds of no change to interest rates per CME FedWatch.

Assuming the Federal Reserve leaves interest rates unchanged as expected, the market’s focus will immediately shift to the central bank’s Monetary Policy Statement and the (SEP) for potential market-moving changes.

Once traders have digested any tweaks on those fronts, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell’s press conference will be the main volatility catalyst for traders as they seek more clarity on how the Fed is viewing the apparent slowdown in the labor market and outlook for in the second half of the year.

FOMC Meeting Forecast

“There are good reasons to think the Fed would be preparing to cut interest rates this week due to recent improvements on inflation—if not for the risk that tariffs pose to prices.”

In his full Fed preview article, the Wall Street Journal’s “Fed Whisperer” highlighted the sticky situation Jerome Powell and Company find themselves in. With the overall economy and labor market humming along for most of the past half-decade, the Federal Reserve has essentially had to focus only on bringing inflation down, a task that it has (perhaps belatedly) mostly accomplished by now.

However, all economic data is backward-looking, and inflation is a particularly lagging indicator. As Jerome Powell, NY Fed President John Williams, and others have outlined in recent weeks, the FOMC believes the economic outlook is unusually uncertain, and many policymakers are concerned that tariffs could drive (at least) a temporary spike in inflation.

For that reason, the central bank is almost certain to remain on hold in June, and traders believe that a similar argument will hold through the July Fed meeting as well, where traders are pricing in only a 1-in-8 chance of an interest rate cut:

Source: CME FedWatch

As is often the case in the “forward guidance as a policy tool” era, the market impact of the Fed meeting will come more from the central bank’s Monetary Policy Statement, Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), and Chairman Powell’s press conference than the interest rate decision itself.

When it comes to the central bank’s Summary of Economic Projections, the FOMC is likely to reduce its full-year GDP growth estimate from 1.7% to closer to 1.3% or 1.4% after a slow Q1. The inflation forecast will be the most closely scrutinized component of the forecasts, with a small upward tweak from 2.8% to closer to 3.0% possible amidst tariff uncertainty.

In recent weeks, the US labor market is showing increasing cracks beneath the surface:

  • The 4-week moving average of has edged up to 240K, the highest since 2023
  • The 4-week moving average of continuing unemployment claims is at 1.91M, its highest reading since COVID.
  • Each of the last 4 reports has seen negative revisions to the prior months’ initial estimates
  • The unrounded U3 has risen every single month since January, and a continuation of that trend could take it above 4.5% by the end of the year

Despite these signs, the Fed may nonetheless leave its year-end unemployment projection at 4.4%, with an outside chance that the central bank bumps it up to 4.5%.

The hotly-anticipated “dot plot” of interest rate projections will be a key area of focus, but the median expectation for two interest rate cuts this year may remain unchanged, even if several policymakers expect fewer interest rate cuts this year. As always, the oft-quoted median forecasts can hide relevant details about the distribution of forecasts among FOMC members.

Finally, we are likely to see more questions about the impact of tariffs, military conflicts in the Middle East, and the potential for tax cuts at Jerome Powell’s press conference. As usual, expect Powell to deflect and dodge questions about trade and fiscal policy instead re-emphasizing that the central bank doesn’t try to predict future policies (e.g. tariffs, tax cuts, etc), only respond to their economic impact if and when they are enacted.

These types of questions will inevitably a bigger talking point over the next four years than they have been over the last four years.

Technical Analysis – EUR/USD Daily ChartEUR/USD-Daily Chart

Source: StoneX, TradingView

From a technical perspective, the world’s most widely traded currency pair is consolidating at its highest level since 2021. EUR/USD has put in back-to-back “inside candles,” where the high of the day is below the high of the previous day and the low of the day is above the previous day’s low. This price action signals near-term consolidation and is often seen prior to a higher-volatility breakout once a clear catalyst emerges.

A dovish surprise from the Fed – perhaps a hint that the door remains open to a July rate cut or a strong lean toward cutting in September (currently “only” 60% priced in) – could lead to a bullish breakout in EUR/USD, with potential for a continuation toward long-term Fibonacci retracement resistance in the mid-1.17s next. Meanwhile, a “steady as she goes” approach to monetary policy would likely prompt a near-term dip toward previous-resistance-turned-support at 1.1430 before the longer-term trend has a chance to reassert itself.

Original Post

Most Popular

More from Author

Markets Await Trade Deals as Trump Makes New Tariff Threats

Dollar edges higher, gold slips despite confusion and renewed trade tensions Trump...

Gold Prices Under Pressure as Tariff Talks Offset Geopolitical Risks

Tariff Negotiations Weigh Down on Gold Gold () rose slightly on Friday...

Oil Price Retreats but Bullish Technicals Suggest Upside Ahead

The NA session kicks off quietly, with subdued volumes as American...

Stocks Week Ahead: Can Small-Business Optimism, Inflation Clues Keep Bulls Alive?

There’s not much on this week’s economic calendar. The only big...

Read Now

Markets Await Trade Deals as Trump Makes New Tariff Threats

Dollar edges higher, gold slips despite confusion and renewed trade tensions Trump delays tariff deadline to August 1, says trade deals are close Wall Street hits record after Congress passes Big Beautiful Bill Oil recovers from lows after OPEC+ hikes output more than expected New Threats and ExtensionsThe dreaded July 9...

Gold Prices Under Pressure as Tariff Talks Offset Geopolitical Risks

Tariff Negotiations Weigh Down on Gold Gold () rose slightly on Friday as markets adjusted amid evolving trade headlines. However, it pulled back during the day as traders monitored negotiations with key U.S. trade partners, many aiming to finalise deals or secure more time ahead of approaching deadlines....

Oil Price Retreats but Bullish Technicals Suggest Upside Ahead

The NA session kicks off quietly, with subdued volumes as American traders take the day off, giving markets a breather after the upside surprise in the last week and fresh diplomatic updates from the US. From a price action perspective, has been consolidating in a narrow...

Stocks Week Ahead: Can Small-Business Optimism, Inflation Clues Keep Bulls Alive?

There’s not much on this week’s economic calendar. The only big event was supposed to occur on Wednesday, July 9. That would have been 90 days after President Donald Trump postponed his April 2 reciprocal tariffs on America’s trading partners on April 9 for 90 days. Today,...

June Payrolls Jump, but Other Growth Indicators Paint a Sluggish Picture

June beats consensus on the back of education and health services employment, while private NFP surprises downside. With S&P Global monthly flat over the last six months through May, many key indicators followed by the NBER  Business Cycle Dating Committee (BCDC) are flat or falling...

Fed Gets Breathing Room as Labor Market Holds Firm

The monthly jobs report hit today (unusually, on a Thursday, due to the real and perfectly sensible holiday tomorrow blocking the typical Friday release) and the reaction was immediate. All the equity futures remain strong, but paradoxically, it can sometimes be a spike to the upside that...

How California’s Housing Reforms Could Reshape US Cities Over the Next Decade

Things are moving fast these days. Texans for Reasonable Solutions, among others, has helped push through a number of housing reforms in Texas. Maine has passed a couple of bills that should allow more step-change urban development, as I put it in the “Market Segmentation” post. And California has suddenly...

Week Ahead – RBA, RBNZ Decisions and Fed Minutes Eyed as Trade Deals Awaited

July 9 tariff deadline looms as trade deals remain elusive Fed minutes to be watched after positive jobs report RBA expected to cut but RBNZ to likely stay on hold OPEC+ to probably raise output again UK GDP, Canadian employment and Chinese CPI data also on tap The Race to the Finish...

The Fiscal Treadmill Is Speeding Up and Washington Keeps Jogging

As of 1980, the rolling 10-year and 20-year real GDP growth rates stood at 3.2% per annum and 3.5% per annum, respectively. Owing to a slight boost from the good parts of Reaganomics—sweeping deregulation, tax rate cuts, and sound money, which were partially offset by the long-term ills...

Immuthera’s Scientific Advisory Board: World-Leading Expertise Driving Next-Generation Diabetes and Immunotherapy Solutions

Immuthera's Scientific Advisory Board: World-Leading Expertise Driving Next-Generation Diabetes and Immunotherapy SolutionsDistinguished experts Dr. Jay Skyler, Dr. Desmond Schatz, and Dr. Lawrence Steinman have joined Immuthera's Scientific Advisory Board.Immuthera will continue expanding its Scientific Advisory Board over the coming months to build a truly world-class team.In collaboration...

Risk Assets Extend Gains but Low Volumes Could Skew Monday Open

Yesterday’s market action was driven by consecutive upside surprises in US (147K vs 110K exp) and data (50.8 vs 50.5 exp), fueling another wave of positive sentiment and pushing US equities into yet another frenzied rally. The reaction to the data was progressive but consistent, taking...

Risk-On Sentiment Fades as Tariffs Return to the Spotlight

Dollar surrenders gains posted after robust labour market report Trump celebrates US budget bill approval; scheduled to sign it today Most Fed members feel more comfortable as July rate cut is priced out Oil steadies near $66, gold rally retains momentum Thursday Proved to Be Rather EventfulWhile the US is celebrating...