The upcoming FOMC meeting is a crucial inflection point. A rate cut will focus investors on the timing of subsequent cuts. A hold will pivot the conversation to whether the easing cycle is over and if rate hikes could return in 2026, dramatically impacting Treasury markets.
The Fed's data-dependent policy is hamstrung by the government shutdown. If the shutdown persists, the lack of data itself becomes a signal of economic harm, potentially forcing the Fed to implement an "insurance" rate cut based on assumption rather than evidence.
Current rate cuts, intended as risk management, are not a one-way street. By stimulating the economy, they raise the probability that the Fed will need to reverse course and hike rates later to manage potential outperformance, creating a "two-sided" risk distribution for investors.
The split vote on rate cuts (hawkish vs. dovish) is not merely internal politics. It reflects a fundamental tension between strong consumer activity and AI spending versus a weakening labor market. Future policy hinges on which of these trends dominates.
