FOMC rate decision + dot plot — Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 2:00 p.m. ET (press conference 2:30 p.m. ET, watch it live here)
The Federal Reserve holds eight scheduled meetings per year. This one is among the more consequential in recent memory, not because a rate change is expected, but because of everything surrounding it.
The current federal funds rate sits at 3.50–3.75%, following three consecutive 25-basis-point cuts at the end of 2025. Markets have broadly priced in a hold at this meeting.
What makes Wednesday significant is the accompanying Summary of Economic Projections (the quarterly “dot plot”), which will be the first to reflect FOMC members’ views under materially changed conditions: oil prices up sharply since the Iran conflict escalated, core PCE running around 3.1% (still above the Fed’s 2% target), and February CPI confirmed at 2.4% year-on-year (released March 11).
The December dot plot signalled a median expectation of one 25-basis-point cut across 2026. Traders are watching whether the new dot plot shifts toward two cuts, holds at one, or signals the Fed is in no rush to ease at all given energy-driven inflation risk (less likely, but not impossible).
The meeting also carries leadership context. Chair Jerome Powell’s term expires on May 15, 2026. Kevin Warsh, Trump’s nominee to succeed Powell, is expected to be more open to rate cuts, citing AI-driven productivity as a disinflationary force, but is notably more hawkish than his predecessors on shrinking the Fed’s balance sheet.
Wednesday is one of Powell’s final meetings as chair. Markets are watching his language for any signal about how the transition is being managed and what it implies for the rate path in the second half of the year.
Historically, rate-sensitive assets, including crypto, have responded to FOMC decisions in both directions, including after meetings where the outcome matched consensus expectations.
If the dot plot shifts toward signalling more easing than currently priced, traders may assess this as supportive for risk assets. If it signals fewer cuts, or if Powell emphasises inflation risk from energy prices, traders may interpret that as tighter-for-longer. Neither outcome is certain.
Relevant markets on Kraken Pro: BTC/USD, ETH/USD, and any pair that trades as a risk-on/risk-off asset.
Micron Technology (MU) earnings — Wednesday, March 18, 2026, 4:30 p.m. ET
Micron is the week’s most significant earnings report for crypto-adjacent traders. It is not a crypto company. But it matters here.
Micron’s results are a real-time read on AI infrastructure spending. Its AI memory products, specifically HBM chips, are a critical component in data center buildout. Strong results with strong forward guidance signal that AI capex is holding, which broadly supports the sentiment architecture underpinning institutional crypto allocations in 2026. Weak guidance, conversely, has historically triggered de-risking across tech and crypto markets simultaneously.
Analyst consensus estimates EPS at approximately $8.60, against year-ago EPS of $4.60, representing year-over-year growth of around 87%. The bar is high. How Micron frames demand for the second half of 2026 matters more than the Q2 print itself.
Relevant markets on Kraken Pro: BTC/USD and ETH/USD as risk sentiment reads. Traders active in leveraged positions may want to note that both the FOMC decision and Micron earnings fall on the same day (Wednesday, March 18), creating compressed event risk in a single session.
CLARITY Act Senate Banking Committee markup — timing: mid-to-late March 2026 (unconfirmed)
No specific date has been announced. What is confirmed: as of March 10–12, 2026, the Senate Banking Committee was reported to be targeting a mid-to-late March window for a rescheduled markup hearing on the CLARITY Act, the most significant piece of crypto market structure legislation in US history. The bill passed the House with a 294–134 vote in July 2025. It has stalled twice in the Senate, most recently over a stablecoin yield dispute between banks and the crypto industry.
The most recent reporting indicates senators are actively working toward a compromise. If the Banking Committee advances a version, it would be merged with the Senate Agriculture Committee draft (which cleared committee in January) and put to a full Senate floor vote, where it will need 60 votes to advance.
For traders, the event to watch is not the markup itself but the downstream signal: does it move, or does it stall again? A successful markup would likely be interpreted as positive for broader crypto market sentiment. A further delay would register as a headwind for regulatory clarity expectations in 2026.
Tier 3 events: what else is in the window
End-of-month BTC/ETH options expiry (Deribit) — Friday, March 27, 2026: Deribit settles monthly options on the last Friday of each month. Current open interest figures for this expiry are not yet confirmed and will require verification closer to the date. This is a routine structural event to monitor, particularly if spot price diverges significantly from current levels before month-end.
Nike (NKE) earnings — Tuesday, March 31, 2026, after market close: A consumer demand read. Nike is navigating a brand reset and tariff headwinds. Not a direct crypto catalyst, but relevant to the broader risk appetite picture if results significantly surprise in either direction.
Closing context
This is a compressed two-week window with an unusual concentration of event risk on a single day: Wednesday, March 18 sees the FOMC decision, the dot plot release, and the Micron earnings call within the same evening. Traders running positions across both macro-sensitive crypto pairs and leveraged derivatives are watching for the interaction between these events, not just each one in isolation.
The CLARITY Act’s Senate trajectory adds a second, slower-burning variable. If the Banking Committee secures a markup date in the next two weeks, it may sharpen attention on the structural implications for crypto exchange regulation and stablecoin market structure, regardless of what the Fed does.
Structured thinking around scenario ranges, not predictions, is the appropriate posture for a week like this.
Past market behaviour is not a reliable indicator of future results
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