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    1. Home
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    3. >Fed, BoC strike hawkish tones as top central banks convene in war's shadow
    Finance

    Fed, BoC Strike Hawkish Tones as Top Central Banks Convene in War's Shadow

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 18, 2026

    4 min read

    Last updated: March 19, 2026

    Fed, BoC strike hawkish tones as top central banks convene in war's shadow - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:FinanceBankingMarkets

    Quick Summary

    The U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of Canada held rates steady on March 18, 2026, striking a hawkish tone amid surging energy prices tied to the escalating Iran conflict. Rising oil volatility underscores persistent inflation risks, delaying rate-cut expectations.

    Table of Contents

    • Central Bank Responses Amid Geopolitical Tensions and Rising Energy Prices
    • Fed and BoC Hold Rates Steady, Signal Inflation Vigilance
    • BoC's Stance on Inflation and Energy Prices
    • Fed's Perspective on Economic Uncertainty
    • Global Central Bank Actions and Market Impacts
    • Brazil's Dovish Move Amid Global Hawkishness
    • Policy Signals and Inflation Forecasts in Brazil
    • Oil Price Surge and Global Monetary Policy Outlook
    • Upcoming Decisions from Other Major Central Banks

    Fed, BoC strike hawkish tones as top central banks convene in war's shadow

    Central Bank Responses Amid Geopolitical Tensions and Rising Energy Prices

    By Promit Mukherjee and Howard Schneider

    Fed and BoC Hold Rates Steady, Signal Inflation Vigilance

    OTTAWA/WASHINGTON, March 18 (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Reserve and Bank of Canada struck hawkish tones on Wednesday as the Iran war drove energy prices sharply higher and a pivotal week of global central bank meetings kicked into full swing.

    Both the Fed and BoC opted to hold interest rates steady, yet their leaders made clear they are on alert, wary that rising energy prices could spark a fresh wave of inflation.

    BoC's Stance on Inflation and Energy Prices

    "Governing Council will look through the war's immediate impact on inflation, but if energy prices stay high, we will not let their effects broaden and become persistent inflation," BoC Governor Tiff Macklem said in opening remarks at a press conference after the bank kept its key rate at 2.25%.

    Pressed later by reporters as to how long the bank would look through the effect of higher energy prices, he said, "I don't think you measure this in weeks ... We have got some time to make that assessment."

    Fed's Perspective on Economic Uncertainty

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell was equally cautious.

    "In the near term, higher energy prices will push up overall inflation, but it is too soon to know the scope and duration of the potential effects on the economy," Powell said in a press conference following the Fed's 11-1 decision to maintain its benchmark overnight interest rate in the 3.50%-3.75% range. "The thing I really want to emphasize is that nobody knows: the economic effects could be bigger, they could be smaller; they could be much smaller or much bigger; we just don't know."

    Still, Powell's more expansive comments on U.S. inflation - which has held above the Fed's 2% target now for five full years - and his reluctance to say that risks of a weakening job market posed a greater risk to the Fed's objectives than inflation both helped push market-based rate-cut expectations into 2027.

    Global Central Bank Actions and Market Impacts

    Brazil's Dovish Move Amid Global Hawkishness

    Brazil's central bank was a dovish exception on Wednesday as it kicked off a long-awaited easing cycle with a cautious 25-basis-point cut in its benchmark rate to 14.75%, which is still among the highest in major economies.

    Policy Signals and Inflation Forecasts in Brazil

    Policymakers signaled in January that borrowing costs could start to fall this month, but doubts mounted as the Middle East conflict widened, which the bank's Copom rate-setting committee cited throughout its monetary statement. Policymakers also raised their inflation forecast for this year to 3.9% from 3.4%.

    Oil Price Surge and Global Monetary Policy Outlook

    Benchmark Brent crude oil futures, which were around $70 a barrel before the Iran hostilities began on February 28, shot above $107 a barrel on Wednesday and were threatening to go higher on Thursday after Iran retaliated against Israeli air strikes on its gas fields with attacks of its own against energy infrastructure in the region.

    The central bank decisions in the Americas came a day after the Reserve Bank of Australia hiked rates to a 10-month high and warned of a "material" risk to inflation from the oil price spike. 

    Upcoming Decisions from Other Major Central Banks

    They will be followed in short order on Thursday by the Bank of Japan, European Central Bank and Bank of England. None are expected to hike rates, but the conflict has sharply muddied the global monetary policy outlook.

    (Reporting by Promit Mukherjee in Ottawa and Howard Schneider in Washington; Writing by Dan Burns; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Shri Navaratnam)

    Key Takeaways

    • •Both the Fed and BoC kept interest rates unchanged—Fed at 3.50–3.75%, BoC at 2.25%—while signaling concerns that persistent high energy prices could fuel broader, long-lasting inflation.
    • •Brent crude surged sharply during the week—topping $100 briefly and hovering $80–$90—on disruptions to supply via the Strait of Hormuz amid the Iran war, reinforcing central bank caution.
    • •With global monetary policy meetings underway, heightened uncertainty from energy shocks is clouding the outlook, making any near‑term rate cuts unlikely.

    Frequently Asked Questions about Fed, BoC strike hawkish tones as top central banks convene in war's shadow

    1Why did the Fed and Bank of Canada maintain interest rates?

    Both central banks kept rates unchanged due to uncertainty from energy price surges caused by the Iran war, but signaled vigilance against inflation.

    2How is the Iran war affecting global inflation?

    The Iran war has caused energy prices to spike, raising concerns about persistent inflation worldwide as central banks convene.

    3What did BoC Governor Tiff Macklem say about inflation risks?

    Macklem stated the BoC will monitor the impact of high energy prices and act if inflation risks broaden and persist.

    4What is the outlook for global monetary policy amid the conflict?

    The war has muddled the outlook, with major central banks signaling caution and rate cuts expected to be delayed until 2027.

    5How have energy prices responded to the Iran conflict?

    Brent crude futures spiked from $70 to above $107 a barrel following intensified hostilities, impacting inflation and policy decisions.

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