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A 25 basis point rate cut, the Federal Reserve's "gentle touch".
The Federal Reserve has finally taken action, cutting interest rates by 25 basis points. This move is neither too deep nor too shallow, resembling a placebo prescribed by a doctor, aiming to soothe market anxiety while avoiding excessive liquidity that could trigger a resurgence of inflation.
Don't underestimate these 25 basis points; it's like a discount coupon that makes the capital market restless: the US stock market feels that funds are cheaper, the A-shares are secretly smiling, and the crypto circle is even more confident—"Liquidity is here, brothers, let's go!" But the problem is that this cut is too gentle, and the effects may be delayed. Investors shout "good news" while also wondering: "Do we need another cut?"
From a logical standpoint, the interest rate cut has released three signals: 1️⃣ The Federal Reserve acknowledges that the economy needs stimulation. 2️⃣ Inflation is not yet fully under control, so they dare not make drastic cuts. 3️⃣ The global market has officially entered "Liquidity Game 2.0."
Interestingly, the U.S. government wants to stabilize the economy by lowering interest rates while also spending money fiscally. The result is one foot on the gas and the other not taking off the handbrake; the car goes faster, but the fuel consumption is astonishing.
So, these 25 basis points are not the end, but the prelude to a new round of addition and subtraction. The market shouldn't just focus on the headlines; it needs to understand the underlying policy logic. After all, a gentle cut might just be a probe, and the real drama is yet to come.