The Federal Reserve just did something it rarely does: it got shorter. The FOMC dropped paragraph 4 from its latest policy statement, eliminating language that previously hinted at an easing bias.
The Fed held its federal funds rate target range at 3.50%-3.75% at the June 17 meeting, marking the fourth consecutive hold at that level. Morgan Stanley, which had anticipated this shift earlier in the year, now projects the Fed will keep rates steady through the remainder of 2026, with two 25-basis-point cuts not arriving until January and March 2027.
What the shorter statement actually means
The deleted paragraph had previously contained forward-guidance language suggesting the committee was leaning toward eventual rate cuts. Its removal signals a deliberate pivot to a more neutral, data-dependent posture.
This is the first FOMC meeting under Chair Kevin Warsh, and the trimmed statement appears to reflect his preference for less hand-holding. Rather than telegraphing moves months in advance, the new approach puts markets on notice that they’ll need to read the data themselves instead of relying on Fed breadcrumbs.
Morgan Stanley analysts have characterized this as the Fed adopting a more neutral and data-driven stance. The emphasis is shifting away from forward guidance and toward real-time economic indicators as the primary driver of future decisions.
Inflation forecasts just got worse
The 2026 Personal Consumption Expenditures inflation forecast jumped to 3.6%, up from 2.7% in the March projections. That’s a significant upward revision, roughly a full percentage point higher, and it suggests the Fed sees price pressures proving more stubborn than it anticipated just three months ago.
If inflation is running at 3.6% and the fed funds rate sits at 3.50%-3.75%, real interest rates are barely positive. The Fed has very little room to cut without effectively subsidizing inflation.
What this means for crypto and risk assets
The removal of easing-bias language from the statement is particularly relevant for Bitcoin and other risk assets because it eliminates a key narrative that traders had been pricing in. Morgan Stanley’s projection of no rate cuts until January 2027 means liquidity conditions could remain tighter for the next six months or more.
The research context for this meeting did not highlight any direct impacts on the cryptocurrency market, emphasizing the focus on traditional financial assets and the economy at large.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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