TraderX Fed Watch

Hold Odds Dominate Ahead Of June Fed Meeting

The June 16-17 FOMC meeting is set up as a hold unless the next inflation or labor reports break hard from the current trend.

Published May 13, 2026 870 words 11 sources 12 citations

The Week In One Line

The June 16-17 FOMC meeting is set up as a hold unless the next inflation or labor reports break hard from the current trend.

What Changed

The setup is clear. The traderx.com dashboard points to a hold. Market odds point to a hold. The latest official data show inflation above target and a labor market that has cooled, but has not cracked.

The TraderX dashboard gives a 96.0% probability to a hold, with 2.0% odds for a raise and 2.0% odds for a cut. Investing.com shows a 98.0% hold probability for the June meeting. Oddpool shows a 95.02% hold probability.

The Data

Inflation remains the restraint. Core CPI is running at 2.75% year over year. Headline CPI is running at 3.81%. Both are above the Fed's 2% goal.

The labor data does not force a cut. The unemployment rate is 4.3%. Nonfarm payrolls rose by 115,000. Average hourly earnings are up 3.57% year over year.

Rates still sit in restrictive ground. The target range is 3.50% to 3.75%. FRED shows effective fed funds at 3.63%. The dashboard shows 35 days until the June 16-17 meeting.

The Fed

The Fed has room to wait. Inflation is elevated, but not extreme. Employment is softer than a boom, but not weak enough to demand fast relief. That is the narrow lane for a hold.

The dashboard's communication score is neutral over the last 45 days. A neutral tone gives officials room to keep policy steady while they watch the next reports.

Markets

The Treasury curve shows a market that expects restraint to last. The 2-year yield is 3.95%. The 10-year yield is 4.42%. The spread is 0.47 percentage point.

Market-implied rate odds tell the same story. A hold is the base case. A cut needs cooler inflation and weaker labor data. A hike needs hotter prices or sharper Fed language.

Global And Geopolitical Pressure

The rate call still runs through economic channels. Energy, shipping, trade, supply chains, and dollar funding can feed inflation or tighten financial conditions.

For now, those risks sit behind the inflation and labor data. They become central only if they move prices, wages, credit, or market stress.

What To Watch Next

Watch the next CPI report first. Inflation above target is the main reason the Fed can wait. A cooler print would help the cut case. A hotter print would strengthen the hold case.

Watch payrolls, unemployment, and wages next. The Fed needs enough cooling to trust inflation. It also needs enough job strength to avoid cutting too soon.

Watch the 2-year yield and market-implied odds. If they move hard before June 16-17, the market will be saying the data changed the path.

Bottom Line

The hold case is still the cleanest read. Inflation is too high for comfort. The labor market is not weak enough to force relief. The Fed can wait, and markets expect it to wait.

This is not a market call. It is a policy read. The next data decide how long the hold lasts.

Method note: This post weighs the dashboard snapshot against official Fed material, BLS labor and inflation series, FRED rate and yield series, Treasury curve context, and market-implied rate odds. The aim is narrow. It explains the policy setup, the data pressure, and the next risks to watch. It does not make a market call.

Sources

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