Futures Traders Are Raising the Odds of a Fed Hike This Year. What Does That Mean for the Market?

The futures market has been radically changing its forecast of where interest rates will go this year. And that has major implications for the entire stock market.
As recently as late February, futures traders were pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts by the Federal Reserve by the end of 2026. There was even a growing possibility, according to futures prices, that the Fed might cut rates three times by December.
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That has changed radically over the past month.
As of this writing, futures markets were assigning about a 30% chance that the Fed’s target interest rate would be higher — not lower — at the end of 2026 than it is today.
The yield of the two-year Treasury note also indicates expectations of a rate hike. That yield is very sensitive to monetary policy, and right now it stands at 3.88%, which is above the federal funds rate range of 3.5% to 3.75%, suggesting that bond traders, like futures traders, expect a higher federal funds rate in the near future.
Don’t fight the Fed
What does the possibility of rising interest rates mean for stocks?
There’s a very good reason that investment strategists say “don’t fight the Fed.” Because when the Fed is raising rates — also known as tightening the money supply — risk assets like stocks tend to fare poorly.
That’s because higher borrowing costs limit companies’ investments in new equipment and people, slow expansion plans, and reduce profits. Higher rates also weigh on consumer spending because the effective costs of items that are often financed, such as homes and cars, rise along with interest rates.
Also, bond yields tend to rise in tandem with the Fed’s benchmark interest rate, making bonds more competitive with stocks, which are much riskier.
On Friday morning, investors received more information about what the Fed might do through the end of this year regarding interest rate policy.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics released the April employment report. Payrolls increased by 115,000 last month, after a 185,000 gain in March. That’s the strongest two-month gain since 2024, and suggests the labor market is gaining momentum. And that will allow the Fed to focus on the inflation part of its dual mandate.
And on May 12, the Bureau of Labor Statistics will release the Consumer Price Index for April. That data is potentially more important than the jobs report, as inflation has been rising in recent months and is currently at 3.3% year over year, well above the Fed’s desired level of 2%.




