February economic data continued to reflect the measured disinflationary progression that has characterized conditions throughout the post-pandemic normalization cycle, with price pressures maintaining a trajectory toward the Federal Reserve longer-run objective while remaining modestly above the 2.0% target. The unemployment rate edged up to 4.4%, remaining in a historically lower range and affirming that the labor market has shown recent stability following an extended sequence of gradual softening. With no Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting scheduled for February, the target range of 3.50% to 3.75% remained unchanged throughout the month, and market participants continued to assign meaningful probability to at least one additional 25 basis point rate reduction in 2026. U.S. trade and fiscal policy continue to represent important sources of elevated market uncertainty, while escalating geopolitical tensions contributed to a notable flight-to-quality bid in Treasury securities that drove yields sharply lower across the curve.
The Federal Reserve did not convene in February, consistent with its scheduled meeting calendar, with the next policy decision anticipated at the March Federal Open Market Committee meeting. The target range remains at 3.50% to 3.75%, following three consecutive 25 basis point reductions at the end of 2025. Senate confirmation proceedings for Kevin Warsh, President Trump nominee to succeed Chair Jerome Powell as Federal Reserve Chair, advanced during February, introducing a consequential dimension of institutional uncertainty into an already divided policy outlook. Market-implied probabilities for a rate reduction at the March FOMC meeting remained subdued, while the Chandler team continues to expect a 25 basis point cut in the second half of 2026. Although the February outcome represented a temporary departure from this view and a steeper term structure, the medium-term expectation for yield curve steepening remains intact, supported by ongoing Federal Reserve policy normalization.