The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady again in March, keeping the federal funds target unchanged after three consecutive quarter-point cuts wrapped up 2025. Markets had already priced in the pause. But the real story out of the Federal Open Market Committee meeting wasn’t the decision itself—it was Jerome Powell pointing fingers at tariffs for the second time in as many months.
Powell’s language was measured but unmistakable. During his post-meeting remarks, the Fed Chair zeroed in on goods-sector inflation, calling out tariff effects as a primary driver of the sticky price pressures that have kept the central bank from moving more aggressively toward easing. Services inflation, by contrast, has cooled off. Translation: the Trump administration’s trade policy is making the Fed’s job harder.
This wasn’t subtle revisionism. Back at the January 28 FOMC meeting, Powell had already flagged tariffs as a key factor behind elevated inflation readings. Now, with oil prices surging since the Iran conflict erupted on February 28, the inflation picture has only gotten murkier. Transportation costs are climbing for everyone—consumers filling gas tanks, logistics firms moving goods, airlines pricing tickets. The March Consumer Price Index report, set to drop on April 10, is widely expected to reflect a sharp uptick.
That timing matters. Powell and his colleagues know the data will arrive hot, and they’re already laying the groundwork for why the Fed can’t cut rates anytime soon. By singling out tariffs again, Powell is doing more than explaining inflation mechanics. He’s establishing distance between the central bank’s policy constraints and the White House’s trade agenda.
Wall Street had been banking on lower rates to keep the bull run alive. The S&P 500 has climbed at least 16% in six of the past seven years. The Dow and Nasdaq have notched record highs repeatedly, buoyed by AI hype, quantum computing breakthroughs, and corporate earnings that keep beating lowered expectations. Trump’s Tax Cuts and Jobs Act—which permanently dropped the corporate rate to 21%—gave profit margins an enduring lift.
But cheap money has been the quiet engine behind much of that. When borrowing costs fall, companies can invest and expand more cheaply. Stock buybacks become more attractive. Valuations on growth stocks get easier to justify. The prospect of rate cuts has functioned as a kind of insurance policy for investors, cushioning downside risk and fueling speculative appetite.
Now that cushion is fraying. The Fed’s March decision to hold rates reflects a central bank caught between conflicting pressures. Inflation isn’t collapsing the way policymakers hoped it would. Energy shocks from the Middle East are adding fuel to the fire. And tariffs—meant to protect American manufacturing and reduce trade deficits—are showing up in consumer price data as a direct inflationary force.
The International Monetary Fund warned in its latest outlook that protectionist trade policies could shave growth while lifting inflation across advanced economies. The Congressional Budget Office has similarly cautioned that sustained tariff regimes tend to increase costs for domestic consumers, even when they succeed in redirecting supply chains. Powell didn’t cite those reports explicitly, but his framing aligns with their conclusions.
For Trump, this creates a political headache. His tariff strategy has been central to his economic agenda since his first term. The administration argues that short-term price pressures are worth enduring if they lead to rebuilt factories, stronger labor markets in industrial states, and reduced dependency on foreign supply chains. But if those tariffs prolong inflation and delay rate cuts, they risk undermining the stock market gains that Trump often touts as proof of his economic success.
The Fed doesn’t operate in a vacuum. Powell has faced political pressure before—Trump criticized him openly during his first presidency, and the question of central bank independence has become a flashpoint in Washington. By framing tariffs as an inflation problem at two consecutive meetings, Powell is signaling that the Fed won’t accommodate trade policy with looser monetary policy if it means compromising the inflation target.
That puts the ball back in the administration’s court. Will Trump double down on tariffs, accepting that higher consumer prices might delay the rate cuts markets crave? Or will he soften his trade stance to ease inflationary pressure and give the Fed room to cut?
For now, the Fed is stuck in wait-and-see mode. Powell made clear that future rate decisions will depend on incoming data, not on political preferences. The March CPI report will be critical. If inflation jumps as expected, the odds of a rate cut before summer drop sharply. If it comes in milder than feared, the Fed might have space to move in May or June.
But the message from Powell was hard to miss: tariffs are complicating everything. That’s not a throwaway line. It’s a warning that monetary policy can’t fix what trade policy breaks. And it’s a reminder that even as the stock market flirts with new highs, the foundation beneath those gains is more fragile than the rally suggests.