Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

What expected Fed rate cut next week will do for markets, dollar, investors


(MENAFN- Cision) December 4 2025
Global markets are increasingly positioning for a US interest-rate cut at the December–9–10 policy meeting of the Federal Reserve, with investors concluding that current monetary settings no longer align with an economy losing momentum.
Nigel Green, CEO of global financial advisory giant deVere Group, says the case for easing has strengthened decisively as growth indicators soften and inflation risks continue to retreat.
“The data points to further rat” cuts,” he explains.
“Labor demand is weakening, consumer spending pressure is emerging, and the inflation backdrop has become far less threatening. Policy no longer needs to remain this restrictive.”
Labor market dynamics remain central to expectations for next we’k’s meeting.
While headline job growth persists, underlying signals indicate cooling demand for workers. Job openings have fallen sharply from their peak, hiring intentions have eased and wage growth is moderating across sectors. Businesses are adjusting to softer conditions rather than competing aggressively for staff.
“Forward-looking labor data matters more than backward head”ines,” says Nigel“Green. “Monetary policy has long lags. Central banks that wait for visible stress tend to respond”too late.”
Consumer behaviour reinforces the argument for action. Household spending has supported US growth for much of the past two years, but signs of strain are increasing.
Credit reliance is rising, delinquency rates are edging higher and excess savings accumulated during the pandemic have largely faded. Consumers are becoming more cautious and more selective, particularly around discretionary purchases.
“The consumer engine is still r’nning, but it’s no long”r accelerating,” notes the deVere CEO.
“This change shifts the risk toward overtightening rath”r than overheating.”
At the same time, inflation conditions have altered meaningfully. Goods prices remain contained, services inflation is easing alongside slower wage growth and supply-side pressures have normalized.
While inflation remains above target, the trajectory and risk profile have changed. The probability of renewed upside inflation shocks has diminished substantially.
“Rates were set for an economy running hot, and that environment has passed. Keeping monetary policy unchanged for too long creates un”ecessary downside risk.” /span>
For financial markets, a rate cut next week would validate a transition already underway rather than trigger disruption.
Equities have responded to easing expectations, with sentiment improving and participation broadening beyond defensive sectors. A policy move would reinforce confidence that the tightening cycle has ended and that growth risks are being addressed.
Bond markets would also respond to confirmation that peak rates are behind us. Yields are likely to continue drifting lower as investors adjust duration exposure and reprice future policy paths.
Lower yields would ease financial conditions and improve the outlook for fixed income after years of constriction.
The US dollar would feel the effects indirectly. A shift toward easier policy would reduce yield support, encouraging modest dollar weakness over time as global capital flows diversify.
“A lower-rate US environment changes the global equatio”,” says Nigel Gre“n. “It eases pressure on international markets, improves conditions for emerging economies and supports broader risk app”tite.”
Globally, a Fed move would ripple well beyond US borders. Other central banks would gain greater flexibility, financial conditions would loosen worldwide and cross-border investment could regain momentum following an extended period of tight liquidity.
Nigel Green says n’xt week’s meeting leaves policymakers with narrowing room f“r delay. “Markets are responding to the current available data. When policy follows that reality, confidence strengthens. Hesitation carries it” own risks.”
With expectations firming ahead of –he December 9–10 meeting, the deVere“CEO concludes: “The economic case for a rate cut is clear, investors are positioning for it, and global markets are preparing for the next phase of t”e monetary cycle.”


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