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Less dovish, more reassuring

The Federal Reserve (Fed) started cutting rates yesterday, delivering a widely expected 25bp reduction. The new dot plot shows a median projection of two more 25bp cuts this year and one additional cut in 2026. But the details matter: six members expect no further change, two even pencilled in a rate hike, while nine members see more than just a quarter-point of easing next year, with two of them projecting cuts of up to a full percentage point. In short, the median suggests that Trump won’t get the deep cuts he’s called for — the Fed is not bowing to political pressure.

That’s reassuring. Reassuring because:

  1. The Fed remains independent and data-driven. It acknowledged slowing job gains (with a 900k downside revision to NFP figures) but also noted that unemployment remains low, while inflation “moved up and remains somewhat elevated.”
  2. The Fed doesn’t see a major economic downturn. On the contrary, it revised growth and inflation forecasts higher as it announced the first of a series of rate cuts.

Markets weren’t sure how to take the news. The S&P 500 swung before closing just 0.1% lower. The Russell 2000 surged but erased most of its gains, leaving behind a shooting star candlestick. The US 2-year yield rebounded and the dollar index bounced from a fresh yearly low. Today’s session will be key to gauge whether risk appetite holds. Early signs are positive: US and European futures point higher, suggesting that a reasonably dovish Fed, combined with stronger earnings prospects, looser financial conditions and a weaker dollar, keeps risk assets in a sweet spot.

But geopolitical risks are never far. Just as Nvidia looked set to move past China’s regulatory hurdles — having agreed to a 15% licensing fee to secure export approvals — Beijing went a step further: instructing Alibaba and ByteDance to terminate their orders for Nvidia’s chips. That could cost Nvidia between $300m–$1bn in annual revenue. No surprise, the stock dropped more than 2.5%, breaking below its 50-day moving average. A deeper correction could be in the cards unless the narrative shifts.

Asian markets cheered the Fed’s cut. The Nikkei 225 rose 1.3% to a fresh ATH despite political uncertainties in Tokyo. The CSI 300 hit its highest level since March 2022, while the Hang Seng index briefly touched a four-year high. The Kospi also advanced to a record.

Elsewhere, the Bank of Canada (BoC) followed the Fed with its own 25bp cut, helping the TSX hold near all-time highs. But today’s Bank of England (BoE) decision will be the opposite story: rates are expected to stay on hold, with the UK facing slowing growth, sticky inflation and political/budget worries. Sterling is already under pressure against both the dollar and the euro. The BoE’s hawkish divergence, however, doesn’t appeal to traders: the BoE’s cautious tone isn’t backed by growth momentum. With the US dollar poised for a rebound as crowded shorts likely to be unwound, yesterday’s peak in Cable could mark the start of a move toward 1.31–1.33 over the next six weeks. Against the euro, sterling is also set to weaken. As for the EURUSD, the 1.20 handle — if reached — may act as solid resistance. The Fed’s stance reassures dollar bulls that policy isn’t politically captured, opening space for a medium-term dollar recovery cycle, even if the longer-term outlook remains bearish amid trade tensions, geopolitics and US debt concerns.

As such, gold is offered near ATH and silver is down for a third straight session. Both risk further short-term correction if the dollar strengthens. Crude oil remains capped near $65/bbl, with dollar strength limiting upside. A sustained break out of the $62–65/bbl range doesn’t look likely this week.

Author

Ipek Ozkardeskaya

Ipek Ozkardeskaya

Swissquote Bank Ltd

Ipek Ozkardeskaya began her financial career in 2010 in the structured products desk of the Swiss Banque Cantonale Vaudoise. She worked in HSBC Private Bank in Geneva in relation to high and ultra-high-net-worth clients.

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