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    Home»forex education»2025 Rate Cut Countdown: How Low Will the Fed Go?
    2025 Rate Cut Countdown: How Low Will the Fed Go?
    forex education

    2025 Rate Cut Countdown: How Low Will the Fed Go?

    NeversettleclubBy NeversettleclubMay 26, 2025No Comments6 Mins Read
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    The latest numbers on American inflation
    have left the global financial community wondering. How many times will the
    Federal Reserve cut interest rates this year? With inflation at a four-year
    low, markets are tracking every hint and putting their probabilities together
    with rising confidence. The April 2025 Consumer Price Index (CPI) figure,
    released on May 13 by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, was a stark departure
    from the inflation forecast and had the potential to determine the Fed’s action
    plan for the rest of the year.

    Disinflation gathers pace

    The April headline CPI rose just 0.2%, a
    recovery from the 0.1% fall in March. Far more significant, the year-on-year
    inflation rate slowed to 2.3%, the lowest since February 2021. The reading
    records not just the fading away of pandemic-driven temporary price shocks but
    also the growing potency of the Fed’s two-year effort at aggressive monetary
    tightening.

    Core CPI, stripping out volatile food and
    energy prices, also held steady at 2.8% year-over-year. While still above the
    Fed’s 2% benchmark, the slowdown is the first sign that the most stubborn
    causes of inflation β€” services, housing, and wage-sensitive sectors β€” are no
    longer accelerating.

    Highlight April activity is a sharp 12.7%
    decline in egg prices and a 0.4% decline in “food at home” as both
    capture relief in pantry goods. Shelter costs, which make up more than
    one-third of the CPI basket, however, rose 0.3%. This ongoing rise in housing
    costs remains frustrating to the Fed as core inflation continues to be sticky
    even as headline numbers ease.

    Reading between the lines

    At its May 7 session, the Federal Reserve
    decided to leave its target rate of 4.25%-4.50% in place, citing
    “cross-economic trends” and the still uncertain rate of core
    inflation. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell made cautious but honest comments at his
    press conference, casting aside any reservations when he stated that a rate cut
    is within reach, but not necessarily a given.

    “We notice encouraging signs, but
    too soon to declare victory,” Powell stated. “We need more confidence
    that inflation is on track to a sustainable path to 2%.”

    The Fed release also mentioned new
    geopolitical tensions, decelerating capital expenditures, and the emerging
    effects of recent trade measures. Market participants interpret the Fed’s words
    as “dovish”, since futures prices signal one or two rate cuts through
    2025, and some speculative bets signal three.

    The irony is not lost on veteran
    investors: whereas the Fed assures it uses data, markets increasingly depend on
    the Fed. Each drop in the consumer price index, each report on labor markets,
    and each trade news headline are now used in figuring out the rate cut.

    Trade tensions and tariffs

    April also saw the introduction of a 10%
    across-the-board tariff applied to all US imports, as well as targeted
    increases on Chinese consumer electronics, EV batteries, and foreign-made
    autos. These protectionist measures, although geared toward reshoring critical
    supply chains and energizing domestic production, pose a complex inflationary
    risk.

    So far, these tariffs have not much
    impacted consumer prices β€” perhaps due to long-term contracts, delayed
    pass-through effects, or offsetting cuts elsewhere. But experts expect
    inflation to return in the summer once businesses begin to raise their prices.

    Substantial progress is the initial
    US-China trade agreement in early May to reduce trade tensions. Under this
    agreement, both nations agreed to roll back selected tariffs during Q3 2025. If
    it succeeds, the agreement will solve some of the tariff-sustained inflation
    and soften pressure on the Fed to be higher for longer.

    Forex markets

    USDollar, Weekly

    A key rate cut could significantly affect
    the market as a whole. Let’s examine a few instruments closely.

    USDollar fell to the critical support
    area of 61.8 Fibonacci, and rebounded. However, the price is ready to retest
    this area again. At the same time, Parabolic SAR indicates the possibility of
    growth, and CCI came out of the oversold zone.

    ●
    A break of the 99.000 support area
    will drop the price to 95.500;

    ●
    A rebound from the support will
    bring USDollar back to 101.500 and further to 104.000;

    XAUUSD continues to update historical
    highs, and the price is consolidating near 261.8 Fibonacci. The price crossed
    the upper Bollinger line, indicating overbought.

    XAUUSD, Monthly

    ●
    Consolidation above 3300 will open
    the way to 4200;

    ●
    A rebound from resistance will
    drop Gold to 2750 and on further decline to 2500;

    It is currency traders’ top worry whether
    the European Central Bank and the Bank of England will follow suit. If the Fed
    cuts spending but its counterparts do not, the dollar could fall further. But
    if inflation stabilizes and the Fed procrastinates, the dollar’s appreciation
    could persist.

    Meanwhile, the Japanese yen and Swiss
    franc, the safe-haven currencies, also increased modestly as expectations of
    falling interest rates cause the re-evaluation of risks. Volatility in the
    foreign exchange market is expected to increase during the summer.

    How many cuts are coming?

    With the April CPI numbers in hand and
    inflation seemingly front and center, everyone is waiting for the Federal
    Reserve to act. It’s no longer a question of whether the Fed will cut rates,
    but how often. The existing futures markets are already pricing in a 70% chance
    of the first cut being in September, followed by a second in December, which is
    increasingly likely.

    But there is uncertainty. Sticky core
    inflation, geopolitical uncertainty, the wild card path of tariffs, and a
    still-resilient labor market complicate the projection. The Fed’s dual mandate
    β€” maximum employment and price stability β€” remains a tightrope. If hiring slows
    while inflation keeps falling, the Fed could move more aggressively. If
    inflation re-accelerates, cuts could be delayed into never-never land.

    Conclusion

    The April consumer price index report may
    be the most significant reading of the year. He puts the US economy at a fork
    in the road: low inflation, steady jobs, and a central bank faced with patience
    or preventive measures. The next couple of months will be a test of the Fed’s
    mettle, market imagination, and the strength of international trade.

    For the currency markets, volatility will
    be an opportunity as well as a risk. As the Fed balances down the inflation
    rate and the dollar serves as a barometer of the world’s economy, volatility
    will make both investors and policy makers prepare for a data-driven,
    diplomatically influenced, and decisions-yet-to-be-made second half of 2025

    Countdown cut Fed Rate
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