BREAKING: Federal Reserve Cancels 2025 Rate Cuts – Massive Pivot Ahead!

Get 80% off your first month of Kikoff – Sign up today at – Enjoy! Let's discuss The Federal Reserve Rate Meeting, Why Trump Wants A Rate Cut, and How Tariffs / Conflict Could Affect The Market – Add me on Instagram: GPStephan

PROMOTIONAL OFFER: Get Up To 12 FREE STOCKS when you sign up and make a deposit using my paid affiliate link for WeBull:

GET MY WEEKLY EMAIL MARKET RECAP NEWSLETTER:

Follow Ryan Detrick on Twitter / X –

INFLATION READING:
Prices rose just 0.1% month-over-month, putting the annual inflation rate at just 2.4% (below expectations). Most of the decrease came from energy prices, which fell 1% over the month, and most of the increase came from housing, which is still up 3.9% from a year ago – the lowest increase since late 2021.

It's theorized that the reason we’re not seeing inflation (yet) is that most businesses pre-purchased inventory, ahead of time, to reduce costs in the event tariffs remained in effect. As one analysts points out: “Tariff-driven price increases may not feed through to the CPI data for a few more months yet, so it is far too premature to assume that the price shock will not materialize.”

THE BOND MARKET:
Bond prices have fallen so much that the US stock market is now 50% larger in comparison, a level we haven’t seen since the early 1970s. Why this is concerning:

-The Banking Industry.
Because banks often place customer deposits within bonds, they’re sitting on some of the largest losses, in banking history – essentially being forced to hold, or risk losing a lot of money.

-United States Debt
Typically, US Treasuries are seen as the ‘risk free’ rate of return, but we're now seeing both 10 and 30-year loan terms having to pay more money just to get people to buy them, signaling that investors demand to be compensated more for the risks of endless money printing, growing deficits, higher than expected inflation, and the increasing likelihood that the USA just doesn’t look as attractive as it once did.

-The Dollar Crisis.
As government debt gets bigger, investor's concerns increase, causing them to demand higher rates, causing government to issue more debt, causing investors to demand higher rates. Essentially, there's there’s no way out – other than printing more money and devaluing the dollar.

INTERNATIONAL TARIFFS:
Jerome Powell said that “If the large increases in tariffs that have been announced are sustained, they are likely to generate a rise in inflation, a slowdown in economic growth, and an increase in unemployment. The effects on inflation could be short-lived, reflecting a one-time shift in the price level. It is also possible that the inflationary effects could instead be more persistent,” leading them to take a “wait and see" approach that results in absolutely nothing being done.

Analysts say they may have to chose between “fighting inflation with tighter monetary policy or cutting interest rates to support growth and employment."

STOCK MARKET: BEAR CASE
-A record-high 38% of S&P 500 companies gave negative guidance for future quarters, while only 15% issued positive guidance – which, was the widest negative-to-positive gap since the financial crisis in 2008.
-GDP has declined by 0.3% in the first quarter
-Tariff Uncertainty Over The Next 90 Days
-Stocks Trading At More Than 20x Earnings, which, is historically high.
-International Conflict Could Threaten Our Global Economy

STOCK MARKET: BULL CASE
-Inflation Is Slowing Down
-Corporate Earnings Still Strong
-$7T Cash Waiting On The Sidelines
-If Tariffs / Conflict Gets Sorted – Nothing Holding Us Back (Besides Government Deficit)

So far, every time the market has gained 20% in 2 months, the following 12 month returns have always been up by an average of 30%. Yes, it’s true that past history doesn’t indicate future performance (and anything could happen) but it is worth considering that the market can have the potential to move even higher, despite the economy constantly seeming on the brink of collapse…

My ENTIRE Camera and Recording Equipment:

For business inquiries, you can reach me at grahamstephanbusiness@gmail.com

*Some of the links and other products that appear on this video are from companies which Graham Stephan will earn an affiliate commission or referral bonus. Graham Stephan is part of an affiliate network and receives compensation for sending traffic to partner sites. The content in this video is accurate as of the posting date. Some of the offers mentioned may no longer be available. This is not investment advice.

Mano Kamgang
 

  • @GrahamStephan says:

    -Here is a link containing the source material for each piece of research cited. I do my best to make my videos as accurate as I can, and the additional resources should help anyone who wants to look into them further – enjoy! https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/11ckpq8s33g6RIsb-OpEUZTgDKxRti0Ck0DiHmIXNLuA/edit?usp=sharing
    -Get 80% off your first month of Kikoff – Sign up today at https://getkikoff.com/graham – Enjoy!

    • @Doug_Trio says:

      That 5% allocation is Pokemon cards 🧐😂

    • @Brian00071 says:

      Buy gold and silver $

    • @deleon._angel8278 says:

      Hey man, I have a question. Would you say is wise for me to buy a house right now? I am 19 and my wife 21 is it safe in this economy?

    • @sportsdude206 says:

      Hey, sorry to let you know, but the title of this video is far too relevant to its contents. I suggest changing the title to something like, “It’s OVER. Trump has authorized STRIKING Iran.” while leaving the content of the video unchanged. Thanks.

  • @dillonp470 says:

    Worst time ever to be 18-30 everyone’s stuck in neutral for the past 4 years

    • @VoiceofFreedom54 says:

      Thank God I’m 31.

    • @Evanalmighty2002 says:

      Thank God I’m 17.

    • @MikeyMonies says:

      Thank God I’m 34.

    • @braxtonrosas7338 says:

      Thank 17 I’m God

    • @Tylauriente says:

      I totally get this mentality, but at the same time all of this inflation is going to force the cost of stocks and other assets to go up a lot over the coming decades. Meaning that for anyone starting out their investing journey right now, it’s about as good as it’s going to get for buying opportunities. Considering it’s early on into your investing history, if you make smart decisions, it could end up really good for you. Just following Graham’s advice of dollar cost averaging about 15% of your income into index funds like the s&p, or mutual funds is exactly what you should be doing over the coming decade. Don’t look back in 10 years wishing you would have put your money in.

  • @allie8442 says:

    The federal government income increased to almost $3.5 trillion dollars over the past 12 months. Yet we are at a $1.3 trillion deficit over that period. But what is the total debt for this income? $36.2 trillion. That is a a 1034% debt to income ratio. Would you want to loan $10,000 to someone who makes $100K, but has $1,034,000 of debt? Sure you will get you ponzi scheme fiat because they will just have the fed enter its existence into the computer. But they will inflate away the value.

    • @AnhBui-zp1ee says:

      I don’t agree with the comparison. Governments aren’t households — they manage debt differently. The U.S. holds debt in its own currency and has tools like monetary policy, tax policy, and GDP growth to manage it. The analogy of lending to someone with a high personal debt-to-income ratio oversimplifies how sovereign debt works. Also, calling it a Ponzi scheme ignores the fact that U.S. debt is backed by strong global demand and long-term trust in its economy.

  • @spenserlol says:

    The fed doesn’t take orders from the executive branch, by design (therefore did not “defy orders”)

    • @GrahamStephan says:

      I just thought it was an interesting approach, Trump very clearly wanted him to lower rates

    • @Commtech72 says:

      Exactly. I hate these inaccurate and exaggerated talk points.

    • @rjs11189 says:

      Yeah, well, Trump very clearly wants to be a dictator too.

    • @ts87777 says:

      @@GrahamStephan which is irrelevant so wtf are you talking about when you say “approach” god no wonder Kevin doesn’t want to be your friend, you’re not smart

    • @morbidrob says:

      ​@@GrahamStephan why should the fed take orders from any president? Isn’t that market manipulation?

  • @diegoaponte8512 says:

    Basically, no I can’t buy a house anytime soon

  • @jerzsubbie says:

    Literally no one is surprised that they didn’t cut rates.
    I’d be surprised if we see a single rate cut this year. Maybe if this WW3 really kicks off, we’ll see some pain in the market that will encourage a rate drop.

  • @jordancook3868 says:

    Hey gram love what your doing wanted to say thank you and keep doing what your doing you were a key part of a few people like yourself that helped me open my eyes and started me on my finical journey keep pushing you are valued

  • @arthurpokotylo2466 says:

    Ray Dalio always sounding alarm

  • @Howardbynder says:

    Tariffs haven’t hit because spending is down (my prediction) and it’s fresh but prices are definitely already up. Every manufacturer has preemptively raised prices, but consumer spending is top heavy still.

    • @thomasj1026 says:

      They cut amenities, add ons, upgrades, etc and keep prices the same. That way they don’t have to lower prices and still keep their profit margins

  • @BunkMasterFlex77 says:

    What’s up cuts, it’s rates here…

  • @PatrickIvers-v2k says:

    Bottom line stagflation. It’s gonna be like this for a while.

    • @DRez-Productions says:

      How does it recover?

    • @TheLEE16884 says:

      ​@DRez-Productions pain for regular people. Once enough people die of starvation, JP gives in and makes it possible to buy things again.

    • @BM1726-e2v says:

      @@DRez-Productions Fast way would be to drop rates and keep them down for a couple years of 2022 style inflation, smart way would be to balance the federal budget. Given that the momentum is towards making the budget deficit worse, and that a ~20% increase in prices is politically unacceptable; hope that AI actually catalyzes the explosive growth its proponents promise without the mass unemployment it seems likely to bring.

  • @sabrinabell9555 says:

    The Creature from Jekyll Island has ALL THE POWER!

  • @josejohn9478 says:

    Rand Paul said if it came down to it with the debt, the government could pivot immediately and slash spending and focus on paying it down. So if that’s true, they are going to literally keep going until it is an immediate and urgent crisis. Like a student waiting until the night before their research paper is due to even begin the project they were assigned a month ago. And there would probably be a lot of suffering for everyone.

    • @2legit2011 says:

      Fiat is a credit based system, It must expand to survive. There is no paying down debt.. they will inflate the debt away like they always have. That is how it’s designed. The dollar will debase and prices of everything will continue to slowly rise. Rinse and repeat .

      Ever wonder why prices on literally everything used to be less when you were a kid?? Yeah, that’s central banking for ya.
      Long hard assets.

  • @biblesforbreakfast says:

    Appreciate your work to keep us updated on finance news.

  • @stevenvanderheide6472 says:

    I hate that everyone thinks we need to lower rates. Inflation is the true silent killer and the Fed knows this. We need to need to get inflation down.

    • @kevinlinsley9594 says:

      Inflation is an inevitable byproduct of markets. Money needs to expand because the entire point of a market is to own more than you had last year.
      The system relies on cyclical consumption.
      It is not sustainable at its core philosophy. We can regulate and mitigate the inevitable but when the systems entire point is to own more than you had before like a glorified game of monopoly, then there is just no way around “inflation”.

      We need a new game of monopoly. One that doesn’t rely on personal wealth.

    • @breakfast00club..11 says:

      Ok Democrat

    • @robodaz8 says:

      How exactly do you propose to lower inflation? Lowering rates would have an immediate effect on the market.

    • @beanteam2217 says:

      Inflation is only at 2% rn. I believe it was at high as 6%. Yet, only on certain things I notice a difference.

    • @superfinevids says:

      Then why did the Biden administration print 9 trillion dollars in 4 years…? That’s what really fucked us rn

  • @АннаБврдтинова says:

    I kept scrolling past people swearing by Nixorus books—saying its stuff “they” dont w

  • @Abdulkazeem177 says:

    No rate cuts?! This is brutal. Everyone was betting on relief by mid-2025… now what?

    • @Greymore-c9e says:

      Yeah this pivot’s gonna shake a LOT of portfolios. Bonds down. Real estate stalled. And borrowing just got uglier.

    • @VarneyLewis-n2c says:

      If you’re still carrying adjustable rate anything, this is your warning shot. We refi’d last November and it already saved us alot in projected interest.

    • @Toby-h5p says:

      Been stacking cash thinking a rate drop would open the floodgates. Now I’m just sitting on the sidelines wondering if inflation’s about to spike again.😢😢😢

    • @Raf-c3n says:

      I remember talking to a cfa about this back in January. Not on YouTube, just found him while looking up interest rate hedge strategies. Free call turned into a full restructure—my portfolio went from shaky to $1.2M net growth in under 11 months.

    • @Raf-c3n says:

      Ryan Bryce Lee

  • @austinhorton6350 says:

    Ray Dalio has successfully predicted 12 of the last 3 crises.

    • @Coffeeblack2sugars says:

      lol, yeah, folks watched big short, and now everyone is buying shorts and making YouTube buddies

  • @chadfungus says:

    😂 great intro “and we are fu**ed”

  • @rolenrodes1371 says:

    What we do know is Certain: The Government never Reduces Spending and never Reduces Taxes… There only Option is to Print More Money….thus reducing it’s value causing Inflation.

  • >