The Federal Reserve is set to release its interest rate decision, updated dot and economic projection at 2 PM ET today. For the first time since the early days of the pandemic, there seems to be no clean path forward for the Fed. In an attempt to ease pressures on the energy supply crisis caused by the Iran war, a press release from the International Energy Agency (IEA) indicated that it had already conducted the largest emergency oil reserve release in history with 32 member countries agreeing to a record 400 million barrel release. This however hasn’t helped bring oil prices down. Supply disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz continue to choke markets. Brent is up 10% since the announcement dropped on March 11, now trading again above $100 per barrel.
Bitcoin, now trading above $74K after a breakout on Monday that saw hundreds of millions in shorts wiped out, is essentially front running a dovish outcome. Risk assets are positioned for the Fed to maintain the expectations of one rate cut this year and that the oil shock could be temporary. If the data shows this today, BTC could be on course to move higher toward the $80K region. In case the projection resets to zero cuts in 2026, the potential of this entire breakout could unravel.
The IEA’s $400 Million Barrels Couldn’t Fix Oil: and the Fed Knows It
On March 11, the IEA announced that it had coordinated a 400 million barrel emergency release across its 32 member states amidst the deepening energy supply crisis. This was the largest coordinated release in the agency’s history and more than double the 182 million barrels released after the conflict between Russia and Ukraine broke out in 2022. The United States alone is contributing 172 million barrels over 120 days or roughly 1.4 million barrels daily. Despite the scale, it still only covers around 15% of the supply lost from the Hormuz closure as reported by CNBC.
The market did the math almost immediately. As Al Jazeera noted, strategic reserve releases can help calm sentiment but cannot fix a physical disruption and that remains the main issue right now. This is not a demand spike but a physical supply issue caused by disruptions from airstrikes on infrastructure and hostilities around the critical passageway of Hormuz.
Economist Nabil al-Marsoumi estimates that oil is currently carrying a $40 per barrel risk premium above what fundamentals would otherwise justify. If the largest emergency reserve operation in history could not bring oil prices down below $100, then the inflationary pressure from energy is no longer transitory but structural, at least as long as the Strait of Hormuz sees disruptions. The dot plot today is essentially the Fed’s first public assessment of the situation and how it sees future rate cuts since the Iran war began.
Iran’s New Supreme Leader Just Made the Fed’s Job Harder
Mojtaba Khamenei, was named Iran’s new supreme leader on March 9, days after his father Ali Khamenei was killed in the U.S.-Israeli strikes on February 28. His first public statement, read on state television, made it clear that disruptions in Hormuz could prolong. He vowed that “the lever of blocking the Strait of Hormuz must continue to be used,” CNBC reported.
On Monday, Israel killed the head of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards Basij force, Gholamreza Soleimani, a strike that is more likely to harden Iran’s posture than soften it. The real world cost of all this is already showing up. Cathay Pacific announced a 105% fuel surcharge increase effective today, March 18, jumping from $72.90 to $149.20, a direct pass-through of the Hormuz closure hitting consumers.

This is the backdrop the Fed is walking into today. Core PCE is already sitting at 3.1%, above the 2% target, and that number was collected before the oil shock fully worked its way into consumer prices. The March and April CPI reports are where the real damage will show up. There is no ceasefire on the table, no negotiation framework visible and a new supreme leader who has explicitly committed to using the Strait as leverage. The Fed’s dot plot today isn’t just a rate forecast, it’s a projection of how long they think this lasts and how much of it they’re willing to look through.
Bitcoin at $74K: the Market’s Real Time Verdict on the Dot Plot
Bitcoin moved past $75K yesterday reaching a high of $76K, a level last seen on February 4. The rally was likely triggered by forced closure of bearish bets, as put-option hedges around the $55 to $60K range were unwound. GoinGlass data shows that over $568 billion in short positions were liquidated in the past two days. Institutional demand has also taken a bullish turn with data from SoSo Value showing that this month has already seen net inflows of $1.74 billion and a seven day inflow streak. This marks the strongest signs of institutional buying pressure re-entering the market since early October. Markets are currently leaning toward a dovish posture from the Fed. This matters because any surprises from the data released today could hit harder than it would have done two weeks ago.
The setup going into the FOMC today is actually pretty straightforward. If the Fed maintains the dot plot of 1 cut this year, it effectively validates the thesis that the oil shock is temporary and growth concerns outweigh inflation. This is a massive green signal for markets and could push BTC higher toward the $80K mark. On the other hand, if policy shifts to zero cuts in 2026, the read is that inflation is no longer under control. In such a scenario, the unwind could be fast and the key level to watch would be $70K.
Historically, Bitcoin’s has also shown a consistent pattern following FOMC decisions. According to Phemex Research, Bitcoin has dropped after seven of the last eight interest rate decisions. Notably, the price reached a low within 48 hours after the event, making March 20 as a key window if the pattern holds.
What the Dot Plot Must Answer and What to Watch at 2PM

The interest rate decision in itself is not the focal point today as the CME FedWatch data indicates a 98.9% probability that rates are held. Markets have largely priced this in but what hasn’t been factored in yet is the dot plot and economic projections. Right now this stands at one rate cut this year and any shift we see here will likely have a detrimental impact on risk assets. That said if projections hold steady, the risk-on trade could see a continuation as this would imply that the oil shock might just be temporary.
Apart from this, traders and analysts will be keeping close tabs on Powell’s conference after the data is out. If the dot plot stays unchanged but Powell leans hawkish in the 2:30 PM press conference, emphasizing “data dependence” while sidestepping the oil shock, markets could enter a period of chop rather than trend. Bitcoin would likely consolidate in the $73K–$76K range as participants wait for clearer inflation data in April. Ultimately, Powell’s language matters more than the statement itself. Whether he labels the oil shock as “transitory” or “structural” will define the macro regime for Q2.
