It's all about Fed, but watch for these flareups
It's all about Fed, but watch for these flareups · CNBC

The Federal Reserve in the coming week may finally signal it is on a course to raise interest rates for the first time in nine years.

Anticipation of a change in its more than 6 year old zero-rate policy has been sending ripples through financial markets, lifting the dollar and driving commodity prices lower. Stocks have swung wildly, with the Dow making four triple-digit moves in both directions in the past week.

The Fed meets Tuesday and Wednesday and is expected to remove the word "patient" from its statement, putting markets on notice that it is getting ready to consider a rate hike as early as June. Markets have shifted ahead of the central bank-with a strengthening dollar increasingly viewed as a negative factor for the stock market.

Andrew Burkly, head of institutional portfolio strategy at Oppenheimer Asset Management, said stocks could continue to see selling pressure into the Fed meeting. "I think maybe there's a continuation of this," he said of Friday's downdraft. The S&P 500 (CME:Index and Options Market: .INX) was down 0.9 percent for the week to 2,053, and the Dow (Dow Jones Global Indexes: .DJI) was off 0.6 percent at 17,749.

Burkly said oil prices could also be a key to the coming week. "Oil is going back to test its low," he said. "We're either going to hold it or break it next week ... if it breaks to a new low, you have to take it as a negative for the (stock) market."

He said investors would then reassess the impact on earnings of oil and energy companies, and those names could see selling pressure. West Texas Intermediate futures for April fell more than 9 percent to settle at $44.84 per barrel, just 39 cents above January's closing low.

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Some analysts are targeting an area around $40 as a floor for WTI, but others say if the oversupply issues continue to grow, the bottom could be much lower.

The dollar move and oil's decline have created a level of anxiety in markets for what they could potentially mean for the Fed. Under the central bank's dual mandate, it is expected to seek full employment and stable prices, but inflation has been stubbornly low. More disappointing data on the inflation front came in the producer price index Friday, which surprisingly declined in February.

"(Fed Chair Janet) Yellen has gone to great lengths to say they don't need to see inflation at 2 percent, but they do need to see a firming in core inflation," said Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial. "They have to be sure when they raise rates, they don't have to go back again. They are going to move very glacially."