【BlockBeats】On December 25th, an interesting data point was released—faster-than-expected economic growth has brought about changes, and CME’s observation data shows that the probability of a rate cut in January 2026 has significantly converged.
After this data was published, the leading candidate for Federal Reserve Chair, Haskett, directly made a statement. He believes that the foundation for growth still comes from three factors: falling prices, income growth, and improved market sentiment. He also did some calculations: if GDP growth maintains around 4%, new employment is expected to return to a range of 100,000 to 150,000 jobs per month. But he was also straightforward—he stated that the Federal Reserve is clearly lagging behind the trend on rate cuts.
However, there is a key detail. The economic growth in the third quarter was mainly due to a rebound caused by the depletion of inventory backlog and trade disruptions, which actually masks the broader trend of weakening employment margins. With employment becoming a core policy consideration and the selection of the Federal Reserve Chair gradually finalized, the market generally expects about three rate cuts still to be possible in 2026.
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MoneyBurner
· 12h ago
Has the probability of rate cuts converged again? Haha, isn't this just paving the way for subsequent "surprises"? The inventory rebound masks the employment downturn; in simple terms, it's just a false boost that will eventually fall back. I bet there will still be rate cuts in 2026. Isn't this the opportunity to build positions?
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ProposalDetective
· 12-25 01:25
Inventory rebound masks the employment truth; our recent figures are inflated... Has the expectation of rate cuts reversed again?
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MeltdownSurvivalist
· 12-25 01:24
The probability of interest rate cuts has shrunk again, and the promised three chances now seem uncertain. The obvious rebound in inventories masks some real signals... Employment is the real issue; just looking at GDP figures is too misleading.
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faded_wojak.eth
· 12-25 01:24
Is the probability of rate cuts converging? Hasset's trash talk is interesting; he says the Federal Reserve is behind the curve, but then has to look at employment data to decide. It's a typical case of "I want to cut but I can't say it."
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SeasonedInvestor
· 12-25 01:21
Hasset's rhetoric sounds smooth, but the employment data is indeed weakening... It still feels like they're just making empty promises.
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GateUser-44a00d6c
· 12-25 01:21
So no more rate cuts, huh? The Federal Reserve is starting to be hawkish again? The inventory rebound is a lie; employment is truly weak.
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On-ChainDiver
· 12-25 01:11
The stock rebound in this wave of market is a bit fake; employment is the real key issue.
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TradingNightmare
· 12-25 01:10
Coming back to deceive with interest rate cuts again? The GDP data looks good, but can the inventory rebound and trade rebound be trusted? Employment data is the real truth.
Federal Reserve's rate cut expectations change: Are there still 3 opportunities in 2026?
【BlockBeats】On December 25th, an interesting data point was released—faster-than-expected economic growth has brought about changes, and CME’s observation data shows that the probability of a rate cut in January 2026 has significantly converged.
After this data was published, the leading candidate for Federal Reserve Chair, Haskett, directly made a statement. He believes that the foundation for growth still comes from three factors: falling prices, income growth, and improved market sentiment. He also did some calculations: if GDP growth maintains around 4%, new employment is expected to return to a range of 100,000 to 150,000 jobs per month. But he was also straightforward—he stated that the Federal Reserve is clearly lagging behind the trend on rate cuts.
However, there is a key detail. The economic growth in the third quarter was mainly due to a rebound caused by the depletion of inventory backlog and trade disruptions, which actually masks the broader trend of weakening employment margins. With employment becoming a core policy consideration and the selection of the Federal Reserve Chair gradually finalized, the market generally expects about three rate cuts still to be possible in 2026.