BREAKING: Federal Reserve JUST SLASHED RATES – Massive Pivot Ahead!

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FEDERAL RESERVE SHIFTS TO RATE CUTS
Jerome Powell acknowledged rising downside risks, signaling a shift from resisting cuts to moving proactively. Despite GDP growth, concerns about layoffs, unemployment, and weakening demand pushed the Fed to cut rates earlier than expected.

INFLATION AND CURRENCY PRESSURES
Inflation is creeping back toward 3%, while the U.S. dollar has weakened significantly. This complicates the Fed’s timing, as cutting too aggressively risks higher prices, but delaying risks worsening unemployment.

HISTORIC JOB REVISIONS
The Bureau of Labor Statistics revised job data, showing 1 million fewer jobs than previously reported (worse than 2008 crisis levels). Economists argue the Fed acted too late, and some suggest 3% may effectively replace 2% as the new inflation target.

THE 10-YEAR TREASURY’S POWER
The Fed controls short-term rates, but mortgage rates and broader borrowing costs depend on long-term treasuries, especially the 10-year. If investors doubt U.S. debt stability, yields rise, pushing up costs despite Fed cuts. Moody’s recently downgraded U.S. debt outlook, projecting interest payments could consume 30% of the budget by 2035.

HOUSING MARKET SLOWDOWN
Housing prices are softening as inventory grows. A divide exists between owners locked into low mortgages and recent buyers stuck with high rates. Even with Fed cuts, mortgage rates may not fall unless treasury yields decline.

TREASURIES AND STOCK MARKET IMPACT
Rising treasury yields compete directly with stocks and real estate. Concentration risk is mounting as the top 10 S&P 500 companies make up 40% of the index, echoing dot-com era patterns. Nvidia holds unprecedented weight, fueling bubble concerns.

JOBS AND AI-DRIVEN UNEMPLOYMENT
For the first time in years, unemployed workers now outnumber job openings. Fed officials noted AI-heavy industries show higher unemployment, suggesting technology is reshaping labor dynamics.

FUTURE FED PROJECTIONS
The Fed plans another 50 basis points of cuts by year-end. Inflation is expected to stay above 2% through 2028, signaling a new normal. Powell called this a “risk management cut” but admitted job growth was below break-even. Markets reacted cautiously, selling off late in the day.

BALANCING ACT AHEAD
The Fed faces a dilemma: cutting too fast risks runaway inflation, while waiting risks higher unemployment. With Powell’s term ending in May 2026, political influence on future appointments could steer Fed policy further toward aggressive easing.

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  • @GrahamStephan says:

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  • @kurtishelgesen says:

    This is where the fun begins

    • @GrahamStephan says:

      Next few meetings will be interesting!

    • @juanmedinar20 says:

      Everything is up double digits already 😮

    • @James-ln6li says:

      I don’t think it is… they only projected 1 cut in 2026. This is a sign of stagflation.

    • @SuperChriz92 says:

      It was a .25% cut, relax 😂

    • @AlexanderTheGoodEnough says:

      @@James-ln6li oh god, i hope you’re wrong. its the worst-case scenario. usually high inflation is great if you have a portfolio rich in equities…but when growth is lacking and employment rates remain low…then there’s less benefit from being in that asset class.
      bad news for me. maybe its the time to pull out of the market and build a local business with the money I just made liquid instead of just keeping running a wheel strategy on my S&P500 shares. I’ll pull out on a collar to make it cheap or even get some credit from the strike points of the spread, but if you’re right and stagflation is where we’re headed? I just don’t know where to deploy my capital as effectively as I have over the last 20 years.
      maybe I might play the VIX as I dip out. if people like me are thinking the same way then premiums will spike hard, might as well capture some of that movement before everyone starts moving.

  • @countryfucius says:

    They definitely did not “slash” rates. Mortgage rates and Treasury rates are UP after the announcement.

    • @jamesmclain1449 says:

      Came here to say the same. Slash = 25 basis points?? No.

    • @countryfucius says:

      ​@@jamesmclain1449That’s the smallest cut possible. If they had done 75 or 100 basis points, this wouldn’t be the click bait headline that it is.

    • @AnimEva_33 says:

      ​@@countryfuciusif he cut 75 to 100 pts, the market would sell off immensely because it would be extremely hawkish and seem like a desperation move

    • @PF_Goat says:

      It’s their first time cutting rates this year and projecting 5 more 25 point cuts by this time next year. If they do that, yes it is slashing rates.

  • @RAS_Squints says:

    Alright boys, money printer goes BrRrRr

  • @ShinDMitsuki says:

    We never got inflation under control. Now we are going back towards it because employment numbers were horrible. We keep saying the fundamentals are there, but the fact this is necessary is really exposing the house of cards. Hope I’m wrong.

    • @countryfucius says:

      Can you explain why you feel banks making more interest in overnight lending helps cut consumer pricing and why that’s a good idea?

    • @pavelkoudelka8934 says:

      yah, tarif dont like stable prices 😀 thats what you get for (Trump) playing with fire…

    • Anonymous says:

      What were you saying when inflation rate was 9.1%?

    • @davidthomas6949 says:

      Supply/ Demand. Can’t build more homes, robbing the native population of the nature they are entitled too, endangering / undermining conservation & wildlife protection areas/projects, and creating worse and worse population density. Less people = less demand = less pressure on every sector of society including “lack of jobs”. Maybe people could actually get a family doctor?

    • @shinji1264 says:

      Is it that hard to keep your currency strong and have responsible fiscal policies…? Nixon removing the gold standard caused all this reckless spending.

  • @Spartan1337green says:

    The “money printer” was quantitative easing which is totally different from cutting interest rates…

    • @DonutAgain says:

      True, those are different, but to be fair he was talking about buying federal debt, that needs qe

    • @jimjam5570 says:

      Not really. More companies borrowing more due to lower rates is still more money created out of thin air which is still inflationary…

    • @qwerther44 says:

      The QE that started in March 2020 DIRECTLY LED to where we are now. Socialism for the rich, rugged capitalism for you and me.

  • @nicolasbeaujean5358 says:

    Can’t believe you got this out so fast. Developer here- overnight rates are down, all other rates spiked up(1,2,3,5&10year). No bueno for real estate.

  • @PatrickHoodDaniel says:

    Here is the cute animal missing from the video: 🐒

  • @scotth5237 says:

    This was not a surprise

  • @James-ln6li says:

    They didn’t slash rates… they only projected 1 cut in 2026. This is not what the market wanted. The Fed is saying that they see weakness, but the economy hasn’t broken yet. This is bad… The money printers are not going ‘burrr’ and rates are not being “slashed”. This is more a sign that we are staying in stagflation. You are wrong Graham. This is a bad sign.

  • @SuperChriz92 says:

    I wouldn’t say rates are slashed if it’s only .25%

  • @mattopfer9784 says:

    How am I 6 min in and don’t know what the rate cut is….. I give up

  • @PhilipWong55 says:

    Cutting rates during stagflation is like trying to put out a fire with gasoline. It attacks the problem from the wrong side. The painful but necessary remedy involves raising rates to extinguish the inflationary fire first.

  • @hannahviolet927 says:

    I miss when grahams channel wasn’t clickbait…

  • @EconomicNinja says:

    Interesting take Graham

  • @XtianCyrus says:

    even if there is free money printing, the big corporations will not use the money to reinvest in their operations and hire people.. instead they buyback their shares to artificially inflate the stock market

  • @MichelDobbins says:

    I see XA21P moving right along side all the Alt’s you mentioned! Plus I see all the Alt’s plus XA21P moving in lock step in the charts! My point is XA21P is cheap! Retail likes buying cheap! Especially when that cheap item is on the verge of becoming expensive

  • @KoenigLayman says:

    Thanks for the update! I’m holding and buying more XA21P! XA21P is the sleeping dragon in this run and its about to wake up.

  • @MoiraConnely says:

    Its time to ignore All FUD and Focus on XA21P price targets. Its XA21P time now. ❤

  • @KennedyMendlewicz says:

    Thanks for the XA21P update! I am loving my XA21P!

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