As Fed Rate Decision Looms, Global Markets Brace for Powell's Guidance

The U.S. Federal Reserve’s two-day policy meeting begins today with markets bracing for what could shape asset allocation through 2026. A 25-basis-point rate cut appears priced in by traders, yet the real market driver will be Jerome Powell’s post-meeting commentary and the policy statement’s forward guidance on next year’s monetary path.

European equity markets are poised to open with minimal volatility on Tuesday, as investors await the Fed’s decision looms over trading floors worldwide. The uncertainty extends beyond 2025—what happens in 2026 remains the key question for portfolio managers. Treasury yields have already climbed to their highest levels in over two months, reflecting inflation anxieties and shifting rate cut expectations.

Markets React Ahead of Fed Verdict

Asian bourses declined broadly overnight, though losses stayed contained following U.S. President Donald Trump’s approval of H200 chip exports to China. Nvidia emerged as a clear beneficiary from months of negotiated trade arrangements, with the semiconductor export deal reinforcing AI development under controlled protocols. Meanwhile, China’s Politburo signaled a more measured approach to 2026 stimulus while emphasizing domestic demand strengthening.

Dollar Strength and Commodity Pressures

U.S. Treasury yield gains are fueling dollar appreciation, creating headwinds for crude and gold. Oil extended Monday’s 2 percent selloff, while precious metals languished below the $4,200 per ounce threshold as investors price in limited Fed rate cuts ahead. The U.S. job openings report for October will be watched today, though the economic calendar remains otherwise subdued.

Wall Street and European Bourses Close Mixed

U.S. equities retreated as rate-cut optimism faded against inflation concerns. The Dow retreated 0.5 percent, while the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 fell 0.1 and 0.4 percent respectively. Europe’s Monday session reflected similar caution—the Stoxx 600 finished flat with a bearish tilt, Germany’s DAX managed marginal gains, France’s CAC 40 slipped, and the FTSE 100 declined 0.2 percent ahead of this week’s central bank calendar crunch.

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