#美联储联邦公开市场委员会决议 the release of the Fed's decision at 3 a.m. is not so much suspense as it depends on how the Fed chairman tells the story. The 25 basis point rate cut has long been written on the face, and what really determines the follow-up market is the wording - behind every word there is room for market interpretation.
Looking back at the 25 basis point action in October, Powell warned that inflation could rebound, bluntly saying that the December decision was "not yet finalized." Inflation has not fallen below the Fed's 2% target line since March 2021. Recently weak labor market data and PCE are also showing signs of slowing inflation, all of which are reinforcing market expectations of interest rate cuts. However, last week's initial jobless claims hit a more than three-year low, which eased concerns about the rapid deterioration of the labor market, but in turn put the Fed's policy research and judgment in a dilemma because of data divergence.
External factors have pushed decision-making up several notches: fiscal doubts caused by the government's massive tax cuts and spending plan, uncertainty about tariff policy, concerns about the independence of the Federal Reserve, and the 43-day government shutdown that directly stuck the release of key economic data, all of which have exacerbated the confusion of policy direction.
If Powell releases a more dovish signal this time, the US stock market and the currency circle may join forces to pull a wave, and this momentum may be maintained until mid-December. But don't forget that Japan may raise interest rates around that time, and the risk of black swan is not small.
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TokenomicsDetective
· 16h ago
Powell is about to start performing again, and the wording game has always been the most profitable game
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VitalikFanboy42
· 16h ago
Powell has to make up a story again, and the key is to use words and tricks... Anyway, there is no suspense of 25 basis points, it depends on how he buries the hole in the market outlook
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IntrovertMetaverse
· 17h ago
How Powell phrases this time is the key, 25bp has long been a certainty, it depends on how he tells the story of the rebound in inflation
The data is so differentiated, the Fed must be quite entangled, if you want me to say that it is betting on whether the moderate signal can last until December
Don't just stare at the market of the U.S. stock market, Japan's interest rate hike will disrupt the situation, and the black swan is really unguardable
The 43-day shutdown has blocked all economic data, and now the Fed is making decisions like a blind man... This policy environment is outrageous
It would be cool if Powell really sent a moderate signal, but it doesn't feel that simple, inflation has been stuck above 2%
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SoliditySlayer
· 17h ago
Powell is about to start his wording magic show again, listen to how he tells a story with 25 basis points. To be honest, it is difficult for the Fed to differentiate the data into this, on the one hand, the labor market is weak, and on the other hand, unemployment benefits are at a low level, and everyone is confused.
#美联储联邦公开市场委员会决议 the release of the Fed's decision at 3 a.m. is not so much suspense as it depends on how the Fed chairman tells the story. The 25 basis point rate cut has long been written on the face, and what really determines the follow-up market is the wording - behind every word there is room for market interpretation.
Looking back at the 25 basis point action in October, Powell warned that inflation could rebound, bluntly saying that the December decision was "not yet finalized." Inflation has not fallen below the Fed's 2% target line since March 2021. Recently weak labor market data and PCE are also showing signs of slowing inflation, all of which are reinforcing market expectations of interest rate cuts. However, last week's initial jobless claims hit a more than three-year low, which eased concerns about the rapid deterioration of the labor market, but in turn put the Fed's policy research and judgment in a dilemma because of data divergence.
External factors have pushed decision-making up several notches: fiscal doubts caused by the government's massive tax cuts and spending plan, uncertainty about tariff policy, concerns about the independence of the Federal Reserve, and the 43-day government shutdown that directly stuck the release of key economic data, all of which have exacerbated the confusion of policy direction.
If Powell releases a more dovish signal this time, the US stock market and the currency circle may join forces to pull a wave, and this momentum may be maintained until mid-December. But don't forget that Japan may raise interest rates around that time, and the risk of black swan is not small.