The US economy enters June in a complex environment where high interest rates, trade tariff policy and elevated energy prices continue to shape market expectations.
The Federal Reserve’s target range sits at 3.50% to 3.75%, while markets are watching how new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh frames the path ahead. The next Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on 16 to 17 June could be an important test for rate expectations, especially while Brent crude remains above US$100 per barrel and the US-Iran ceasefire continues to hold.
Fed Funds Rate
3.50% to 3.75%
Next FOMC
16-17 June 2026
Brent Crude
Above US$100/bbl
Key June data events
6 major releases
Growth, business activity and demand
Real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annual rate of 2.0% in the first quarter of 2026, supported by private investment and exports. However, some sectors are feeling the squeeze from trade tariffs and elevated transport costs, which may be starting to weigh on forward order books.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- Resilience in business investment for advanced technological equipment
- Revisions to consumer spending trends under the “K-shaped” economic divide
- The impact of newly announced Section 122 tariffs on import volumes
- Signs of corporate margin compression in retail and industrial sectors
Why it matters: Stronger-than-expected growth data may support US Treasury yields and the US dollar, potentially keeping pressure on equities. Softer growth data, by contrast, could lower interest rate expectations and weigh on the US dollar, which may support growth-sensitive stocks.
Labour, payrolls and employment data
The US labour market continues to navigate a “low-hire, low-fire” equilibrium. Recent indicators suggest the hiring pace may be slowing as firms adapt to higher financing costs.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- Whether net payroll additions remain in the 100,000 to 150,000 range
- Movements in the unemployment rate
- Revisions to prior months’ employment data
- Wage growth trends through average hourly earnings
Why it matters: A stronger-than-expected NFP print may lift US Treasury yields and support the US dollar, while capping equity valuation multiples if rate cut expectations move lower. A weaker-than-expected jobs report could weaken the US dollar, lower bond yields and support rate-sensitive assets such as gold.
Inflation, CPI, PPI and PCE
Inflation remains the central market risk. Energy prices, tariffs and services inflation are all feeding into expectations for how long the Fed may need to keep policy restrictive.
June data to watch
What markets are watching
- The PCE price index as the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge
- Second-round effects from elevated fuel costs on core services
- The extent to which tariff-related import costs are passing through to consumer goods
- Business pricing behaviour in the monthly PPI data
Why it matters: Cooling inflation data may lower Treasury yields, weaken the US dollar and support gold and stock indices. Sticky or accelerating inflation could reinforce a higher-for-longer policy stance, which may support the US dollar and pressure Treasuries.
Policy, trade and geopolitics
Trade policy remains a major wildcard. The temporary 10% blanket tariff under Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974 is scheduled to terminate on 24 July, leaving markets to assess whether temporary surcharges could be replaced by longer-term Section 301 tariffs. That path could influence international supply chains, import costs and corporate margin structures.
June events and themes to monitor
Themes to monitor this month
- Progress of negotiations on Strait of Hormuz shipping protocols
- Congressional debate over the extension of corporate tax cuts
What markets are watching
Markets will be watching whether the Fed leans into inflation control, acknowledges growth risks, or keeps its language deliberately balanced. Policy signals may matter as much as the rate decision itself. If the statement, projections or press conference suggest the Fed is becoming more concerned about inflation persistence, Treasury yields and the US dollar could remain supported. If the Fed gives more weight to slowing activity, rate expectations may move lower.
Key watchlist summary
- Top data point: May CPI on 10 June at 8:30 am ET | 10:30 pm AEST
- Top policy event: FOMC statement on 17 June at 2:00 pm ET | 4:00 am AEST (Next Day)
- Top risk event: Strait of Hormuz transit disruptions
- Wildcard: Section 122 tariff adjustments
- Earnings watch: Late-quarter retail releases
- Key threshold: US 10-year Treasury yield above 4.5%
- Next FOMC: 16 to 17 June 2026
Bottom line
June puts the US market narrative back on inflation, rates and policy credibility. The Fed is not only managing the level of interest rates. It is also managing the market’s confidence that inflation risks from oil, tariffs and wages can stay contained.
For traders, the key issue is whether June data supports the higher-for-longer story, or whether softer growth and labour signals begin to pull expectations in the other direction.

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