KEY POINTS
  • On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve is expected to announce it will start unwinding its $120 billion monthly bond purchases – a program it started to support the economy during the pandemic.
  • Fed Chairman Jerome Powell is likely to stress the end of the bond program and the start of rate hikes are not connected, but the market is already aggressively pricing in two to three hikes next year.
  • Powell's comments on inflation could be the most important message from the Fed, since that may help investors get a sense of the central bank's thinking around interest rate policy.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell testifies during a Senate Banking, Housing and Urban Affairs Committee hearing on the CARES Act, at the Hart Senate Office Building in Washington, DC, U.S., September 28, 2021.

This week, the Federal Reserve is widely expected to announce the unwinding of its monthly bond-buying program – a measure it started to support the economy during the pandemic. However, the bigger story for markets is how the central bank will discuss inflation.

That's because report after report of hotter-than-anticipated inflation has ramped up expectations that the Fed will fight the trend of higher prices by beginning to raise interest rates next year, about six months sooner than the last Federal Reserve forecast.