The Federal Reserve is widely expected to deliver its third consecutive interest-rate cut today, lowering the benchmark federal funds rate to 3.50%–3.75%. But policymakers are preparing to pair the move with a message that additional easing is far from assured. A divided Federal Open Market Committee is attempting to balance rising concerns over labor-market weakness with inflation that remains stuck above the central bank’s 2% target.
A growing split has emerged inside the Fed between officials who believe more cuts are needed to prevent deeper job-market deterioration and those who argue policy has already eased enough, risking renewed inflation pressures. That tension has given rise to what markets are now calling a “hawkish cut” – a rate reduction delivered alongside guidance that further moves may be on hold.
Why the Fed Is Likely to Opt for a Hawkish Cut
Officials appear to be converging on a compromise: provide modest support to the softening labor market while signaling that policymakers want to pause and evaluate incoming data before taking additional action.
Former Fed monetary-affairs director Bill English said the most probable outcome is “a cut accompanied by a statement making clear the committee may be done for now.” He expects Chair Jerome Powell to emphasize that further adjustments will require clear evidence the economy is evolving as forecast.
The updated dot plot, which reveals each participant’s rate expectations, will be closely scrutinized for signs of internal dissent. The October meeting saw two formal “no” votes one arguing cuts were too aggressive, the other pushing for more easing. Analysts expect similar disagreements this time, along with several “soft dissents” reflected in diverging rate projections.
Recent economic data gives ammunition to both sides of the debate. Hiring slowed notably in October, with 218,000 fewer hires and a 73,000 uptick in layoffs, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Yet inflation, measured by the Fed’s preferred gauge, is still running at 2.8% annually, well above target.
Former Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester expects one more rate cut but warned that inflation risks remain too elevated for the Fed to fully pivot toward easing. “Policy must stay somewhat restrictive to maintain downward pressure on inflation,” she said.
Market Implications and What to Watch Next
Investors will not just focus on the rate decision but also on signals regarding balance-sheet policy. As previously covered, the Fed indicated it would soon halt “quantitative tightening,” ending the runoff of maturing Treasurys and mortgage securities. Some analysts now expect the committee to take the next step – resuming modest bond purchases to stabilize funding markets, though not at levels associated with full-fledged quantitative easing.
Powell’s tone in the press conference will shape market reaction, especially if he highlights internal disagreement or stresses that further cuts will require convincing evidence of weakening activity or disinflation. Goldman Sachs economists expect the statement to revive language referencing “the extent and timing of additional adjustments,” implying a higher bar for future easing.
For now, markets appear confident about Wednesday’s cut but less certain about what follows. With inflation still sticky and labor trends weakening, investors will be parsing every word for clarity on whether this meeting marks a pause or simply a waypoint.