‘The path to this decision has been one of the more intriguing ones of the year,’ market strategist Jay Woods said.
The Federal Reserve’s final policy meeting of the year is expected to end with an interest rate cut, but all eyes will be on Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell’s outlook for 2026.
Monetary policymakers will gather for their Dec. 9—10 Federal Open Market Committee meeting, where they will decide on the benchmark federal funds rate and provide their outlook for next year.
Investors overwhelmingly anticipate that Fed officials will vote to lower rates by a quarter point, shifting the target range from 3.75 to 4 percent to 3.5 to 3.75 percent, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
If the rate-setting committee follows through on a cut, it would represent the third consecutive reduction to the policy rate, suggesting that the central bank is entrenched in an easing cycle.
Despite the increasing odds of a cut, policymakers have expressed diverging opinions on the path of monetary policy and current economic conditions.
Leading up to the December meeting, several officials have been vocal in supporting the continued lowering of interest rates in response to a deteriorating labor market. Others are hesitant about proceeding with additional cuts amid elevated sticky inflation.
Minutes from the last meeting also highlighted a chorus of dissenting views.
“The path to this decision has been one of the more intriguing ones of the year,” Jay Woods, chief market strategist at Freedom Capital Markets, said in a note emailed to The Epoch Times.
Based on futures market data, traders are not accustomed to this kind of discourse. Last month, investor sentiment shifted from 70 percent odds of no move to 90 percent odds of a cut.
In October, the Fed voted 10–2 to proceed with a 25-basis-point cut. Fed board member Stephen Miran preferred a half-point reduction, while Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid supported keeping interest rates unchanged.
With a December rate cut fully priced in, investors will be paying close attention to Powell’s post-meeting press conference for any clues on what is next.
“For the most dovish fans out there, it may be tough for him to set the table for another cut going forward; the key is that he doesn’t rule it out entirely,” Woods said.
By Andrew Moran







