The $14 Trillion US Stock Rally is Seeking a Fed Cut Playbook

The $14 Trillion US Stock Rally is Seeking a Fed Cut Playbook

The $14 Trillion US Stock Rally is Seeking a Fed Cut Playbook

<p>Traders work on the floor of the American Stock Exchange.</p>

Traders work on the floor of the American Stock Exchange.

A $14 trillion rally that has taken stocks to record highs is heading for an inflection point next week, with investors expecting the Federal Reserve to resume cutting interest rates at its long-awaited monetary policy meeting.

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The S&P 500 Index is up 32% from its April lows, buoyed by bets that the Fed will lower borrowing costs several times this year, and a 25-basis point reduction on Wednesday is seen as a lock. Bullish traders may have history on their side: The index has been 15% higher, on average, a year after cuts resumed following a pause of six months or more, data from Ned Davis Research going back to the 1970s show. That compares to a 12% gain in the same period after the first cut of an ordinary cycle.

The worry is whether the Fed has acted quickly enough to head off an economic hard-landing that would undercut the case for stocks to rise further. Though growth remains relatively strong and corporate profits are healthy, ominous signs have cropped up in recent data, including a jobs report that showed unemployment at its highest level since 2021. Investors are employing a range of strategies to take advantage of an expected shift, from buying shares of smaller companies to sticking with the megacap names that have led markets higher.

“We’re in a unique moment,” said Sevasti Balafas, chief executive officer of GoalVest Advisory. “The big unknown for investors is how much is the economy slowing and by how much will the Fed need to cut rates. It’s tricky.”

With the Fed’s post-meeting statement set to be released at 2 p.m. on Wednesday, investors will look for changes in the latest quarterly rates projections, known as the dot plot, and pore over Chair Jerome Powell’s remarks a half-hour later.

Swaps contracts are fully pricing in at least a quarter-point reduction, with policymakers expected to restart an easing cycle they halted in December. Roughly 150 basis points of cuts are priced in over the next year. An outlook from the Fed echoing that view would be an encouraging sign for stock bulls, who have largely banked on a gradual easing path that keeps the economy from sliding into a recession.

More broadly, “how inflation and economic trends play out in the rest of 2025 and next year will be crucial in determining how the Fed’s easing cycle will progress and how the stock market will fare,” said Andrew Almeida, director of investments at financial planning platform XY Planning Network.