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Abstract This article investigates whether the Federal Reserve leads financial markets through its policy actions and communications or instead follows signals already embedded in asset prices. Drawing on recent FOMC communications, high-frequency financial market data, and empirical evidence on yield curve dynamics and market-implied expectations, the analysis traces the timing and direction of information flows between the Fed and financial markets. The study combines vector autoregression (VAR) techniques, high-frequency event analysis around FOMC announcements, and qualitative assessment of central bank communication to examine monetary policy shocks, interest rate transmission, and expectation channels in an integrated framework. The results indicate a nuanced, state-dependent relationship: the Fed often leads markets through policy surprises, forward guidance, and credibility effects, yet market participants increasingly anticipate or even influence short-term policy paths, particularly during periods of heightened uncertainty and financial stress. Evidence of “Fed Time” volatility, asymmetric responses to easing versus tightening surprises, and significant global spillovers underscores that monetary policy transmission is jointly shaped by central bank actions and forward-looking market expectations. These findings suggest that the traditional view of a one-directional “Fed leads, market follows” paradigm is incomplete and that effective monetary policy now requires managing a two-way feedback loop between policy signals and market pricing in an interconnected global financial system.