Fed's Cautious Stance on Rates Sparks Market Sell-Off

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FEDERAL RESERVE,INTEREST RATES,INFLATION

The Federal Reserve signaled a more cautious approach to future interest rate cuts, leading to a decline in Wall Street stocks. Despite the market reaction, experts suggest the Fed's move reflects a healthy economy and efforts to manage inflation.

The Federal Reserve and its chair, Jerome Powell, made it clear Wednesday that they will move slowly and carefully when it comes to future interest rates, prompting a major sell-off on Wall Street. Investors, though, shouldn't get too nervous, as the central bank is merely responding to a strong economy and the elevated inflation that comes with it, according to DataTrek Research co-founder Nicholas Colas.

'Equity markets were clearly disappointed by Powell's comments, but nothing he said fundamentally alters the bull case going into next year,' Colas said in his daily market note Wednesday evening. 'In the end, we may see fewer (or even no) rate cuts, but that's because the US economy continues to grow and create marginal inflation as a byproduct.' However, markets took Powell's comments, and Fed officials' adjustments to their outlook for the year ahead, as a more hawkish central bank seeing upside risks to inflation. In the 'dot plot' matrix of projections, Federal Open Market Committee meeting participants reduced their expected rate cuts next year to two from four. That it was accompanied by a strongly telegraphed quarter-point reduction in the federal funds rate to a target range of 4.25%-4.5% didn't matter. Markets also adjusted, with fed funds futures contracts now implying virtually no probability of a cut at the January meeting and a roughly even chance of as few as one quarter-point reduction for the full year in 2025, according to the CME Group's FedWatch gauge. Powell said he supported the Fed's aggressive rate reductions since September, which saw a highly unusual half-point cut, but said the path from here is changing. 'We've reduced our policy rate by a hundred basis points. We're significantly closer to neutral. We still think where we are is meaningfully restrictive,' the chair said at his postmeeting news conference. 'I think from this point forward, you know, it's appropriate to move cautiously and look for progress on inflation.

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