Something important happened at the Federal Reserve’s March 18 meeting that flew under the radar for most folks. Buried inside the Fed’s quarterly Summary of Economic Projections (1), policymakers quietly raised their 2026 inflation forecast from 2.4% to 2.7% — a 30-basis-point jump that represents the largest single-year upward revision in recent cycles (2). Core inflation, which strips out volatile food and energy prices, got the same treatment, moving up from 2.5% to 2.7%.

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In simple terms: The people in charge of managing the U.S. economy now expect prices to rise faster this year than they thought just three months ago.

In a word (or rather, a couple of words): energy prices. Since U.S. and Israeli forces launched military actions against Iran on February 28 (3), the cost of a gallon of regular gasoline has surged roughly a dollar — from $2.98 on February 26 to $3.98 by March 26 (4), according to AAA. West Texas Intermediate crude oil closed at $102.88 per barrel on March 30 (5), its highest level since July 2022. Iran’s virtual closure of the Strait of Hormuz (6) — through which a significant share of global oil transits — has restricted supply at a time when spring driving season is pushing demand higher.

The Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland’s Inflation Nowcasting tool (7) now projects the trailing 12-month CPI inflation rate will jump from 2.4% in February to 3.16% in March. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is expected to confirm the official number on April 10.

Those higher fuel costs don’t stay at the pump. They filter into transportation, shipping and the price of virtually everything that moves by truck, rail or ship — which is to say, almost everything you buy.

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The S&P 500 entered 2026 at a Shiller CAPE ratio above 40 (8) — only the second time in the metric’s 155-year history it has crossed that threshold (the first was the dot-com bubble). As of March 2026, the CAPE sat at roughly 38.93 (9), still more than double the long-term historical average of about 17.

Elevated valuations require near-perfect conditions to sustain themselves. Hotter inflation erodes those conditions because it makes rate cuts less likely and raises the specter of rate hikes. At the March meeting, the FOMC voted 11-1 to hold rates steady (10) at 3.5%–3.75%, and the dot plot still shows just one cut this year. But seven of 19 participants now see no cuts at all in 2026 (11), and the longer-run neutral rate estimate edged up to 3.125%.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Energy Information Administration told NBC (6) projects gasoline prices will not fall below $3 per gallon at any point before the end of 2027.

You can’t control the Fed, OPEC, or the price of crude. But you can make deliberate choices that blunt inflation’s impact on your household:

Rethink your cash. With the fed funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75%, high-yield savings accounts and short-term Treasuries are still paying meaningful interest. Idle cash in a checking account earning next to nothing is losing purchasing power every day inflation runs above the Fed’s 2% target. Moving emergency reserves into a high-yield vehicle is one of the simplest ways to keep up.

Audit your fixed costs. Subscriptions, insurance premiums and recurring charges tend to creep higher unnoticed. A quarterly audit of these line items can free up hundreds of dollars a year — money that can be redirected toward assets that historically outpace inflation.

Diversify beyond the S&P 500. With U.S. large-cap valuations stretched, international and emerging-market equities are trading at a significant discount (8) to domestic stocks. Value-oriented and dividend-focused strategies also tend to hold up better during inflationary periods.

Lock in rates where you can. If you’re considering a major purchase that involves financing — a car, a home renovation, a mortgage refinance — the current rate environment may be as favorable as it gets for a while. A 30-basis-point inflation revision doesn’t guarantee rate hikes, but it narrows the window for further cuts.

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Federal Reserve (1); Truflation (2); National Today (3); AAA (4); Advisor Perspectives (5); Fortune (6); Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland (7); Financial Content (8); YCharts (9); CNBC (10); Charles Schwab (11)

This article provides information only and should not be construed as advice. It is provided without warranty of any kind.