Fed Minutes Arrive With Oil Prices Rising and Rate Path in Question -- Barrons.com

Dow Jones04-08

By Nicole Goodkind

The Federal Reserve will release minutes from its March meeting Wednesday, as investors assess a surge in oil prices and rising geopolitical tensions that are complicating the outlook for inflation.

The March meeting took place as those geopolitical risks were building. The minutes will show how officials were weighing them before the latest escalation, and how much of that thinking may still apply.

Since the Iran war began on Feb. 28, borrowing costs have risen and markets have come under pressure, tightening conditions without any policy move from the Fed.

Investors will be watching closely to see how officials discussed inflation expectations. Chair Jerome Powell, Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid, and St. Louis Fed President Alberto Musalem have all warned in the past few weeks that longer term expectations could drift higher if inflation stays elevated.

"I don't take anchored inflation expectations as a God-given truth. I know we have to work very hard at it every day," Musalem said in a speech last week. So far, longer-run measures have remained steady despite volatile short-term data. The minutes should reveal how confident officials were that stability would hold.

The expected path for interest rates will also be in focus. At the time of the March meeting, the baseline was for one cut later this year. That view hasn't fully dissipated, but it has become less certain. Higher oil prices and tighter financial conditions make it harder for the Fed to justify easing. There may also have been some discussion of what might force officials to consider raising rates, which will interest investors.

Investors will also be parsing how officials described the balance of risks and whether there was significant disagreement there. A divided Fed would support keeping rates where they are. A more unified one could shift market expectations.

Minutes from the Fed's March 17-18 policy meeting are due out on Wednesday at 2 p.m. Eastern.

Write to Nicole Goodkind at nicole.goodkind@barrons.com

This content was created by Barron's, which is operated by Dow Jones & Co. Barron's is published independently from Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal.

 

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April 08, 2026 00:30 ET (04:30 GMT)

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