KEY POINTS
  • A hawkish Fed Chairman Jerome Powell vowed to beat inflation and said the central bank may have to raise rates more than expected.
  • That sent stocks lower and bond yields higher, as traders bet the Fed could now raise rates above 5% before stopping.
  • The Federal Reserve left the door open to reducing the size of rate hikes, as expected.

The Federal Reserve remains set on beating inflation and could raise rates to an even higher-than-expected level, though it may reduce the size of its future rate hikes.

The Fed raised its target fed funds rate Wednesday by 75 basis points, or three-quarters of a point, and said it would take into account the lagging impact of higher rates on the economy. That initial statement, released at 2 p.m. ET, was viewed as dovish, since it indicated rate hikes could be smaller.