2025-12-04 11:22:02
The Federal Reserve has gone through a noticeable policy swing in recent months - from initiating a rate cut, to signaling a potential pause, and now shifting once again toward another cut in December. This has created understandable confusion among traders and investors trying to interpret the Fed’s reaction function.
At its core, the Fed is responding to evolving conditions in the labor market, economic activity, inflation progress, and data visibility (especially after delays caused by the government shutdown). Because all these variables moved rapidly - and in different directions - the Fed’s stance naturally evolved.
This analysis breaks down the Fed’s thinking, why they hesitated, and what is now pushing them back toward another round of easing.
In late October, the Fed delivered a 25-bps rate cut, bringing the federal funds rate down to the 3.75–4.00% range. Their reasoning was straightforward:
Cutting rates was intended to support employment and ensure economic conditions didn’t deteriorate more sharply.
The Fed also announced the end of quantitative tightening, meaning balance-sheet runoff would stop on December 1. This signaled a broader shift toward policy easing.
At this point, markets widely expected the Fed to continue cutting into year-end.



Shortly after the October cut, the U.S. government shutdown disrupted the release of critical economic reports. Essential inputs such as:
were delayed.
This left the Fed temporarily “data blind.” Without reliable visibility on inflation and the labor market, the Fed could not confidently justify further cuts.

Several voting members expressed concern that inflation - particularly core inflation - remained uncomfortably above target. Their argument was:
This hawkish pushback caused markets to sharply reduce December rate-cut expectations, turning what had looked like a straightforward path into a 50/50 probability.
With:
the Fed pivoted from dovish momentum to a tactical pause.

The most important recent shift was the deterioration in private-sector employment data.
Private employers reportedly shed over 30,000 jobs, especially small businesses - historically an early warning sign of wider economic stress.
Other indicators confirm cooling conditions:
For a Fed mandated to ensure maximum employment, this labor-market weakness is a strong incentive to ease further.
Officials such as John Williams (New York Fed President, FOMC Vice-Chair) hinted that the Fed now has “room” to lower borrowing costs - a materially different tone from the hawkish pushback weeks prior.
Combined with the end of QT, the broader policy stance is already shifting toward accommodation.
Large institutions like Bank of America and J.P. Morgan, which previously predicted a pause, have now flipped and forecast a December rate cut. Market pricing (Fed funds futures) now reflects this shift, showing strong odds of another 25-bps move.
This alignment matters - the Fed often avoids surprising markets unless necessary.
Even with the tilt toward cutting, the Fed’s decision is not easy.
Core inflation is still above the 2% target. Cutting prematurely risks re-accelerating price pressures - a scenario the Fed wants to avoid at all costs after the inflation surge of 2021–2023.
Because of delayed government releases, the Fed is operating with partial information. This makes the decision inherently riskier.
More FOMC members are expected to vote against the majority stance. The December cut will likely come with visible disagreement - signaling a divided Fed.

The balance of evidence points to a 25-bps cut at the December 9–10 meeting.
Not because the Fed is panicking - but because:
However, this is important:
This December cut is not necessarily the start of a rapid easing cycle.
Instead, it could be a tactical adjustment - a “fine-tuning cut” in response to softening conditions, followed by a cautious evaluation period in early 2026.
The Fed will still watch inflation closely and will not commit to a long sequence of cuts unless further deterioration in jobs or spending materializes.
The Fed’s recent shifts-from cut, to pause, to a renewed cut-reflect how quickly economic conditions have evolved. With the labor market now signaling genuine weakness, the Fed is leaning toward acting again in December. But because inflation remains above target and the FOMC is increasingly divided, this round of easing will be cautious, measured, and likely accompanied by warnings about future flexibility.
Traders should expect a data-dependent, one-step-at-a-time approach, not a pre-committed long cycle of cuts.
If you want, I can also create a timeline chart, forward expectations matrix, or a 1-page summary you can use for your blog posts and market updates.
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