What Next After the Fed’s 25bps Cut? All You Need to Know

The Federal Reserve’s 25 basis point (bp) rate cut, its first of 2025, set the stage for weeks of market debate.

While the move was widely expected, Chair Jerome Powell’s dovish tone at yesterday’s press conference and the Fed’s sharply divided dot-plot have left investors wondering what will happen next.

Powell Signals a Risk Management Pivot

Powell framed the rate cut as a risk management decision in his opening remarks, citing mounting cracks in the US labor market.

Revised payroll figures showing 911,000 fewer jobs than previously reported, alongside rising long-term unemployment, point to a weaker foundation than headline numbers suggest.

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“The risks to inflation are tilted to the upside, and employment risks are tilted to the downside,” Powell said.

The Fed chair also noted that policymakers do not feel the need to move quickly on rates, but must act preemptively to prevent a deeper downturn.

Powell downplayed the inflationary impact of Trump’s tariffs, arguing that the pass-through has been “slower and smaller” than anticipated.

However, he acknowledged price pressures could persist into 2026. At the same time, he described the labor market as no longer “solid.”

He cited hiring slowing, immigration shifts reducing supply, and AI adoption potentially weighing on entry-level jobs.

Bottom line: Powell’s remarks were even more dovish than his 2024 guidance when the Fed slashed rates by 50 bps. This suggests a deliberate pivot toward prioritizing employment over inflation.

Market Reaction With Fed Divisions on Full Display: Dollar Slides, Equities Eye Liquidity

The new dot-plot revealed a central bank struggling to find consensus. Nine of 19 officials see two more cuts this year, while six expect no further easing.

One member even projects a hike, while Trump appointee Stephen Miran dissented in favor of a 50 bps cut.

“This meeting was a mess…One member thinks the Fed hikes this year…another thinks we get five cuts. This rigging of the voting to create the illusion of a ‘consensus’ and then publishing a wide dot plot like this only further undermines their credibility,” said macro investment researcher Jim Bianco.

Fed Dot Plot
Fed Dot Plot. Source: Jim Bianco on X

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Meanwhile, The Kobeissi Letter called the move historic, highlighting the first rate cut in over 30 years with Core PCE inflation above 2.9%.

“It’s clear the Fed is prioritizing the labor market over inflation,” Kobeissi wrote, noting markets now expect as many as four more cuts by September 2026.

The immediate market response was swift. The US dollar fell to its weakest level since February 2022, while equities held near record highs.

Futures markets priced in at least two additional cuts by year-end, with Kalshi data showing the odds of three cuts spiking above 60%.

What Did the Markets Interpret from Powell’s Speech Yesterday?

Barchart highlighted that when the Fed cuts rates within 2% of stock market all-time highs, the S&P 500 has historically risen 100% of the time over the following 12 months, averaging a 14% gain.

Fidelity’s Jurrien Timmer compared the moment to the late-1998 LTCM crisis, when the Greenspan Fed eased into strong markets, fueling a spectacular rebound.

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Crypto markets are also watching liquidity flows closely, with analyst Ash Crypto highlighting prospects for more liquidity in the face of more rate cuts. This, he says, would translate into potential pumps for crypto prices.

“More cuts = More liquidity = pump,” the analyst wrote.

The Case for Caution

Still, not everyone is convinced the cut heralds an extended bull cycle. Mark Minervini argued the Fed’s move was a “token” cut. Given inflation’s persistence, he says it is unlikely to set off an aggressive easing path.

“Rate cuts are typically bullish, particularly when they occur outside of a recession. But the Fed is cutting preemptively rather than reacting to an outright downturn. That distinction matters: it lowers the likelihood of an aggressive easing path, which could diminish the market impact,” he noted.

Meanwhile, economists at The Conversation stressed the balancing act: cutting too quickly could reignite inflation, while moving too slowly risks a sharper labor downturn.

Tariff-driven price pressures complicate the picture, particularly for lower-income households, who spend more on imported essentials that are now climbing in cost.

Henrik Zeberg, a long-time cycle analyst, warned that markets may enter a euphoric blow-off phase before a severe downturn.

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“Liquidity now will only build a higher peak from which the market can crash,” he wrote, likening today’s rally to late-1920s behavior.

What Comes Next

The divergence between strong market technicals and weakening fundamentals leaves investors in a precarious position.

Investors believe Powell has signaled further cuts are coming. Against this backdrop, sentiment is bullish, at least for now, with equities at records and crypto climbing.

Bitcoin (BTC) Price Performance
Bitcoin (BTC) Price Performance. Source: BeInCrypto

As of this writing, Bitcoin was trading for $117,107, while Ethereum exchanged hands for $4,572. Both assets showed strength following the Fed’s decision.

Notwithstanding, risks abound and continue to erode investor confidence. These include:

  • A labor market softening into recession,
  • Tariff-driven inflation stickiness, and
  • Political overtones around Powell’s “risk management” framing.

If the Fed cuts too aggressively, it risks losing its inflation-fighting credibility. At the same time, rising unemployment could force more drastic action later if it moves too cautiously.

Therefore, the next few weeks for riskier assets like Bitcoin may be defined by liquidity-driven optimism. However, this is with the understanding that this rally rests on fragile ground.

It is worth noting that Powell himself acknowledged that the Fed is navigating “a challenging situation” where both sides of its mandate are flashing red. The history of such moments shows markets often rally first and reckon later.

Source: https://beincrypto.com/feds-25bps-cut-labor-risks-inflation-liquidity-bets/