Traders Eye Series of Fed Cuts With Bullish Bets at Risk

A key question for investors this week is whether Federal Reserve officials push back against market bets on a series of interest-rate cuts extending into next year.

A quarter-point reduction is seen as a sure thing when the Fed announces its policy decision Wednesday, with a small potential for a half-point move amid signs US job growth is slowing rapidly. Indeed, President Donald Trump told reporters Sunday that he expects a “big cut” this week. But markets have also priced in reductions continuing deep into 2026 to ward off a recession.

That assumption has driven Treasury yields to the lowest in months, propelled US stocks to record highs and undermined the dollar. Shorter-dated bonds were steady on Monday with the two-year yield at 3.55%, while the 10-year yield was up one basis point at 4.07%.

The risk to those wagers is that Fed Chair Jerome Powell and his colleagues signal that investors have gotten ahead of themselves with inflation stubbornly above the central bank’s target and the impact of tariffs still playing out on prices. That backdrop is amping up scrutiny of Powell’s remarks and officials’ rate projections — the so-called dot plot — to assess whether the Fed plans a more cautious approach on easing policy.

“My gut tells me 25” this week, meaning a quarter-point cut, said Jack McIntyre, a bond portfolio manager at Brandywine Global Investment Management. “The issue is does the statement see the Fed emphasize labor more than inflation?”

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