The Federal Reserve has reportedly maintained its steady stance on rate cuts even in the 2nd straight meeting. In this respect, the Fed has voted 11-1 in favor of keeping interest rates unaltered at 3.75%.
As per the data from The Kobeissi Letter, only Stephen Miran, an FOMC member, favored a cut of 0.25 percentage points. Hence, the updated “dot-plot” of the Fed continues to present just 1 rate cut during this year and 1 in the year to come, highlighting a cautious approach regarding monetary easing.
While the conditions in the Middle East are still uncertain, the Federal Reserve has kept interest rates steady at 3.75% with 11-1 votes. So, just a single dissent was that of the FOMC participant Stephen Miran, who supported a 25 basis point decrease. Additionally, the latest “dot-plot” of the Fed keeps projecting one rate cut each for 2026 and 2027.
The respective decision has earned a rapid volatility across diverse financial markets. Specifically, the U.S. stocks plunged, with investors recalibrating expectations regarding another monetary easing. Additionally, the U.S. dollar has shown strength, highlighting growing investor belief in high-for-longer rates, whereas 10-year Treasury yields surged. This presents concerns over inflation pressures.
As seen, gold prices slumped, as higher yields and stronger dollar decreased demand for the asset. Keeping this in view, analysts assert that the Federal Reserve’s pause may expand for some months, while the term of the Chair Jerome Powell is concluding in May.
This raises speculation that the last rate cut thereof may have already occurred. Additionally, the central bank has revised the 2026 PCE inflation outlook higher to nearly 2.7%, reaffirming the somewhat elevated position of inflation.
According to The Kobeissi Letter, the 11-1 vote signifies solid FOMC consensus irrespective of Miran’s support for a cut. Thus, the December cut appears to be Powell’s final move as his tenure is nearing its close. Overall, markets will keep keenly observing inflation data as well as geopolitical developments because these factors are going to shape the scale and timing of future rate adjustments.

