Iran conflict intensifies, bond market sentiment rapidly reverses—just a month ago, the market expected up to three rate cuts by the end of the year, but now traders are betting that the Federal Reserve may need to emergency hike interest rates within weeks. Bloomberg reports that SOFR options markets are now pricing in bets on a rate hike “within the next two weeks,” with about a 50% chance of a rate increase before December.
(Background: Middle East conflict devastates the global economy! OECD warns US inflation could surge to 4.2%, the Fed may delay rate cuts, and Europe might be forced to hike rates.)
(Additional context: Goldman Sachs estimates a 30% chance of recession in the US this year, while still expecting two rate cuts by year-end: is this bad news or good news?)
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Iran conflict heats up, and the US bond market shows rare signals: traders are beginning to bet that the Fed may be forced to emergency hike rates within weeks. This is one of the most dramatic reversals in market sentiment in recent years.
According to Bloomberg, in the options market tracking Fed policy, demand for bets linked to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) has quietly emerged, corresponding to an “earliest rate hike within two weeks” scenario. If bond markets significantly price in rate hikes before the April 29 FOMC meeting, these positions could profit.
The report notes that the surge in hedging demand for “emergency rate hikes” signals a rapid shift in market sentiment. Just a month ago, the consensus was: up to three rate cuts of 25 basis points each by year-end. Since the outbreak of war on February 28, swap market traders have priced in about a 50% chance of rate hikes before December, increasing the risk of further repricing in short-term US Treasuries.
Jeff Schuh, head of rates at Constitution Capital, says the latest bets do not reflect the baseline market scenario but do reflect growing market concerns: if inflation accelerates rapidly, investors holding long positions in US Treasuries over the past few months face direct risks.
He points out that with rising oil prices sparking inflation fears, traders have heavily unwound long positions in US Treasury futures. The sell-off in SOFR futures and the upward shift in the entire US Treasury yield curve caught many large funds off guard. For funds needing to manage interest rate risk, such bets—“in 90% of scenarios, they make the risk of blow-up more controllable—are a cheap stopgap,” he explains.
Bloomberg’s report reveals a deeper structural issue: war risk premiums are directly seeping into interest rate pricing. For the cryptocurrency market, the shift in Fed rate hike expectations has historically been a headwind for risk assets—lessons from the 2022 rate hike cycle remain relevant, when Bitcoin halved from over $45,000 to below $20,000, largely driven by aggressive Fed tightening.
If the Iran situation continues to escalate and oil prices stay high, pushing inflation further, the Fed’s policy space will be severely constrained, and market expectations for “rate cut benefits” may accelerate their decline. The report notes that this remains a tail-end risk rather than a baseline scenario, but markets are already pricing in the worst-case situation.