The Fed does not control bond rates. The Fed controls overnight lending rates and is connected to the prime rate, but that is very different from the rate on a 5, 10, or 30 year bond. Basically, the Fed very strongly influences the extremely short-term end of the market. That does influence the longer term rates (if you can get 5% short term, you're not going to invest in a 3% 30-year bond in nearly all cases), but those rates are set by the bond market - supply and demand, taking predictions over the next X years and balancing the risks.
It's been said that there is a plan to raise the Fed Funds rate by 3 more times this year. Don't you think that bond investors already know that? If there is a 100% expectation of a rate hike going into a meeting, and the Fed hikes rates by the expected amount, the bond market does not move. What might make bond rates move at a Fed meeting is the unexpected - a hike or absence of hike where one was expected, or a between-the-lines reading on how the future might go - confidence in the economy, inflation readings, or other indications that the Fed might take action more or less than previously anticipated.
It's akin to a company earnings call and the stock price. A company might post dismal or glowing earnings, and the stock movement will not necessarily follow. The key is whether the earnings were better, worse, or the same as expectations.