KEY POINTS
  • The Federal Reserve is completing a yearlong policy review and is expected to announce the results soon.
  • One big change would be a harder commitment to getting inflation higher, through a pledge not to raise rates until it hits at least 2%.
  • Markets have been betting on higher inflation, with surging gold prices, a falling dollar and a rush to inflation-indexed bonds.
Federal Reserve Board Chairman Jerome Powell speaks during a press conference following the January 28-29 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, in Washington, DC on January 29, 2020.

In the next few months, the Federal Reserve will be solidifying a policy outline that would commit it to low rates for years as it pursues an agenda of higher inflation and a return to the full employment picture that vanished as the coronavirus pandemic hit.

Recent statements from Fed officials and analysis from market veterans and economists point to a move to "average inflation" targeting in which inflation above the central bank's usual 2% target would be tolerated and even desired.