US 5-year consumer inflation expectations were 3.2% in March. The reading matched forecasts.
With 5-year inflation expectations coming in exactly as predicted at 3.2%, the main takeaway for us is reduced uncertainty in the immediate future. This predictability suggests a drop in implied volatility, making it a good time to consider selling options premium on major indices. The market has digested this information, so we don’t expect any sudden jolts from the Federal Reserve based on this data alone.
Implications For Fed Policy
This report reinforces the Fed’s steady position from last week’s meeting, where they held rates firm and signaled a patient approach. Considering the latest CPI report showed core inflation still hovering around 3.5%, today’s 3.2% long-term expectation confirms that the market believes the “higher for longer” narrative. We should not position for any aggressive interest rate cuts in the next quarter.
Looking back from our perspective in early 2026, we can see how the market has matured since the chaotic inflation spikes of 2023. Back in 2025, we were still pricing in much larger reactions to these kinds of numbers. Now, stability is the dominant theme, and our strategies must adapt away from anticipating large directional moves.
For equity derivatives, this environment is ideal for range-bound strategies on indices like the SPX. With the VIX currently trading at a subdued 14.5, selling iron condors with strikes outside the expected trading range could capture premium from this lower volatility. The market seems content to drift sideways until the next major catalyst, such as a shift in labor market data.
In the interest rate markets, this stability means the yield curve is unlikely to see a dramatic shift in the coming weeks. Options on SOFR futures are seeing their volatility premium decline, which again favors sellers. We see this as a signal to reduce exposure to trades that rely on big interest rate swings and focus more on income-generating strategies.