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Erik Solberg
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Why the Fed Needs to Cut Rates Because Data Proves itRight now, there is a massive gap between what the Fed says and what is actually happening. While some question President Trump’s style, his demand to lower interest rates is backed by cold, hard facts. The Federal Reserve is ignoring "hidden" signals that show the economy is ready to soar. Let’s Dissect the Facts: 1. GDP Growth: The economy is a rocket. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) just confirmed on January 22 that Q3 2025 growth was 4.4%. & The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model updated its forecast on January 21, 2026. It is now tracking above 5.4% for Q1 2026. . 2. The Inflation Lie: Official vs. Real-Time The biggest disagreement is about the cost of living. ​The Official Number: The government says inflation is 2.7%. But they use old data that is often weeks or months out of date.​The Real-Time Number: Independent trackers like Truflation (which uses live data from Amazon, Walmart, and Zillow) show inflation is actually around 1.7%—well below the Fed's target. 3. Labor Market: The job market is stable, not "overheated." Jobless claims are at a steady 200K, meaning people are working and the economy is healthy. "Traditional economists say you don't cut rates when jobs are strong/steady. But they are wrong. If inflation is dead, keeping rates high is just a tax on growth." 4. No More Excuses for the Fed Fed Chair Jerome Powell says he wants to stay "independent" from politics. That sounds good, but independence should not be an excuse for being slow or wrong. With a steady job market and high growth, this is the "Golden Moment." The Fed can cut rates now to boost the economy without any fear. 5. Protecting the Market If rates don't drop soon, the stock market will stay stuck in a "sideways chop" (going up and down with no progress). This makes investors lose hope. Also, cutting rates will slightly lower the value of the Dollar, which actually helps American businesses sell more products to other countries. The Verdict: If the Fed Powell continues to wait, they risk a "Deflation Spiral" where the economy slows down so much that it sucks up all the potential growth or worse it crashes. If we want to hit 6% growth by the end of 2026, we need lower rates immediately.This isn't just what Trump wants; it’s what the data demands. #USIranMarketImpact #RateCutExpectations #GrayscaleBNBETFFiling #Powell

Why the Fed Needs to Cut Rates Because Data Proves it

Right now, there is a massive gap between what the Fed says and what is actually happening. While some question President Trump’s style, his demand to lower interest rates is backed by cold, hard facts. The Federal Reserve is ignoring "hidden" signals that show the economy is ready to soar.
Let’s Dissect the Facts:
1. GDP Growth:
The economy is a rocket. The Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) just confirmed on January 22 that Q3 2025 growth was 4.4%. & The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow model updated its forecast on January 21, 2026. It is now tracking above 5.4% for Q1 2026. .
2. The Inflation Lie: Official vs. Real-Time
The biggest disagreement is about the cost of living.
​The Official Number: The government says inflation is 2.7%. But they use old data that is often weeks or months out of date.​The Real-Time Number: Independent trackers like Truflation (which uses live data from Amazon, Walmart, and Zillow) show inflation is actually around 1.7%—well below the Fed's target.
3. Labor Market:
The job market is stable, not "overheated." Jobless claims are at a steady 200K, meaning people are working and the economy is healthy.
"Traditional economists say you don't cut rates when jobs are strong/steady. But they are wrong. If inflation is dead, keeping rates high is just a tax on growth."
4. No More Excuses for the Fed
Fed Chair Jerome Powell says he wants to stay "independent" from politics. That sounds good, but independence should not be an excuse for being slow or wrong. With a steady job market and high growth, this is the "Golden Moment." The Fed can cut rates now to boost the economy without any fear.
5. Protecting the Market
If rates don't drop soon, the stock market will stay stuck in a "sideways chop" (going up and down with no progress). This makes investors lose hope. Also, cutting rates will slightly lower the value of the Dollar, which actually helps American businesses sell more products to other countries.
The Verdict:
If the Fed Powell continues to wait, they risk a "Deflation Spiral" where the economy slows down so much that it sucks up all the potential growth or worse it crashes. If we want to hit 6% growth by the end of 2026, we need lower rates immediately.This isn't just what Trump wants; it’s what the data demands.
#USIranMarketImpact #RateCutExpectations #GrayscaleBNBETFFiling #Powell
CandleKing007:
@Erik Solberg hope so, Cuz crypto market badly need some catalyst
Still No Demand Regime Change for BitcoinToday we'll cover: Still No Demand Regime Change for BitcoinGold ETF Flows Are Catching Up to BitcoinInflation Data Is Not Conducive to Rate Cuts Taken together, these three charts point to the same conclusion from different angles. Bitcoin’s price action isn’t being held back by a single shock or headline risk. It’s being constrained by a broader setup where fresh demand remains fragile, capital continues to favour defensive assets during uncertainty, and monetary policy lacks the room to turn meaningfully supportive. That combination doesn’t rule out recovery. But it does mean that upside remains conditional, easily interrupted, and highly sensitive to confirmation rather than narrative. In this environment, what matters most is not isolated signals, but whether they can reinforce each other over time. Still No Demand Regime Change for Bitcoin Last week, Bitcoin briefly crossed an important threshold: rolling 30-day ETF flows turned positive. That matters because sustained ETF inflows are a precondition for any durable price recovery. Without new capital consistently entering through ETFs, upside moves tend to stall rather than compound. We also flagged at the time that this was only an early signal, not confirmation. This week made that distinction clear. Renewed geopolitical tensions spilled into broader markets, triggering another bout of risk-off behavior… again. Since the start of the Trump administration last year, this pattern has repeated itself again and again: periods of calm interrupted by tariff threats, policy headlines, and sudden volatility. Most risk assets managed to recover from the latest shock. Bitcoin didn’t. The reason is simple. Bitcoin isn’t just dealing with macro uncertainty, it’s also coming off a deep and prolonged drawdown in capital flows. As the chart shows, cumulative Bitcoin ETF flows have now been in drawdown for more than 100 consecutive days. That’s an unusually long stretch of sustained net demand weakness. When demand is this fragile, even modest spikes in volatility are enough to interrupt recovery attempts, which is exactly what happened this week, as the nascent inflow streak broke once again and rolling flows are negative once more. The result is a market that remains unresolved. A recovery is still possible, but it is not yet self-reinforcing. Until ETF inflows can persist through periods of broader market stress, Bitcoin remains in an undecided demand regime rather than a confirmed recovery phase. Cumulative Bitcoin ETF flows have now been in drawdown for over 100 days, a sign that recent price stability has lacked durable demand support. Short-lived inflow streaks have repeatedly failed under market stress, highlighting why confirmation, not optimism, remains the key missing ingredient. Gold ETF Flows Are Catching Up to Bitcoin Earlier this week, we looked at how correlation dynamics across macro assets influence Bitcoin’s behavior. One of the key conclusions was that, in the current environment, gold has been quietly benefiting at Bitcoin’s expense. When you zoom out, that shift becomes very clear. The chart below compares cumulative net flows into Bitcoin ETFs and gold ETFs since the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in early 2024. Bitcoin initially dominated, attracting significantly more capital than gold. But that gap has narrowed sharply over the past few months. Since November, Bitcoin ETF flows have stalled. Gold ETF flows haven’t. As a result, gold is now only about $6 billion behind Bitcoin’s roughly $58 billion in cumulative net inflows over the same period. And the gap continues to close. This isn’t happening because gold and Bitcoin are telling different long-term stories. In fact, they share many of the same structural narratives around hard assets and protection against monetary debasement. The difference shows up in the short term. Repeated risk-off episodes (many tied to U.S. tariff threats and policy uncertainty since 2025) have consistently favored gold. During those moments, gold tends to attract fresh inflows, while Bitcoin behaves more like a risk asset and struggles to retain momentum. In other words, even when both assets rise over long horizons, their demand dynamics diverge when uncertainty spikes. And over the past year, those spikes have been frequent enough to steadily tilt relative flows toward gold. Since Bitcoin ETF flows stalled in late 2025, gold ETFs have continued to accumulate capital, steadily closing the gap. Repeated risk-off episodes have favored gold’s defensive profile, highlighting how short-term demand dynamics (not long-term narratives) are driving relative flows. Inflation Data Is Not Conducive to Rate Cuts Markets broadly expect the upcoming FOMC meeting to result in no change to the policy rate. Part of that expectation is political. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has been explicit that monetary policy will remain data-driven, and cutting rates while facing overt political pressure would require a clear justification in the numbers. That justification isn’t there. The labor market hasn’t broken, despite repeated fears over the second half of 2025. And inflation continues to pose essentially the same challenge it did two years ago. The chart below shows year-on-year PCE inflation, which I remind you is the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation. Even smoothing out short-term noise and data delays related to the government shutdown, the message is straightforward: inflation has been stuck at elevated levels for roughly two years. More importantly, it remains well above its pre-COVID range. That matters because the COVID shock is no longer recent history. We are now nearly six years removed from the 2020 crisis. Year after year of inflation running above target compounds, both economically and politically, and it limits how much flexibility the Federal Reserve has. Absent a clear downside surprise in inflation or a sudden deterioration in growth, this makes a fast or aggressive rate-cutting cycle unlikely. Cuts may still come eventually, but they are likely to be cautious and conditional rather than front-loaded. This isn’t a new message from the Fed, and it probably won’t rattle markets on its own. But it does act as a brake on how quickly risk-on assets can expand, even if it lacks the shock value of tariff headlines or geopolitical flare-ups. PCE inflation has made little net progress for nearly two years and remains well above its pre-COVID range. This persistent plateau limits the Fed’s ability to justify rapid rate cuts absent a clear deterioration in growth or labor conditions. Tactical Takeaway The current setup argues for restraint rather than anticipation. Bitcoin is not facing an outright hostile environment, but it is still operating without durable demand confirmation and without meaningful macro tailwinds. In this kind of market, early signals tend to appear and disappear, and short-lived recoveries are easily interrupted by volatility or shifts in risk appetite. For investors, the key mistake to avoid is treating stabilization as validation. Until ETF inflows persist through market stress increasing exposure aggressively risks chasing moves that lack reinforcement. The discipline here is simple: let confirmation set the pace, not conviction. Incremental positioning can make sense, but only if demand and macro signals begin to align rather than diverge. (Market commentary, not financial advice.) #BTC #BTCVSGOLD #RateCutExpectations

Still No Demand Regime Change for Bitcoin

Today we'll cover:
Still No Demand Regime Change for BitcoinGold ETF Flows Are Catching Up to BitcoinInflation Data Is Not Conducive to Rate Cuts
Taken together, these three charts point to the same conclusion from different angles.
Bitcoin’s price action isn’t being held back by a single shock or headline risk. It’s being constrained by a broader setup where fresh demand remains fragile, capital continues to favour defensive assets during uncertainty, and monetary policy lacks the room to turn meaningfully supportive.
That combination doesn’t rule out recovery. But it does mean that upside remains conditional, easily interrupted, and highly sensitive to confirmation rather than narrative. In this environment, what matters most is not isolated signals, but whether they can reinforce each other over time.
Still No Demand Regime Change for Bitcoin
Last week, Bitcoin briefly crossed an important threshold: rolling 30-day ETF flows turned positive.
That matters because sustained ETF inflows are a precondition for any durable price recovery. Without new capital consistently entering through ETFs, upside moves tend to stall rather than compound.
We also flagged at the time that this was only an early signal, not confirmation.
This week made that distinction clear. Renewed geopolitical tensions spilled into broader markets, triggering another bout of risk-off behavior… again. Since the start of the Trump administration last year, this pattern has repeated itself again and again: periods of calm interrupted by tariff threats, policy headlines, and sudden volatility.
Most risk assets managed to recover from the latest shock. Bitcoin didn’t.
The reason is simple. Bitcoin isn’t just dealing with macro uncertainty, it’s also coming off a deep and prolonged drawdown in capital flows.
As the chart shows, cumulative Bitcoin ETF flows have now been in drawdown for more than 100 consecutive days. That’s an unusually long stretch of sustained net demand weakness. When demand is this fragile, even modest spikes in volatility are enough to interrupt recovery attempts, which is exactly what happened this week, as the nascent inflow streak broke once again and rolling flows are negative once more.
The result is a market that remains unresolved. A recovery is still possible, but it is not yet self-reinforcing.
Until ETF inflows can persist through periods of broader market stress, Bitcoin remains in an undecided demand regime rather than a confirmed recovery phase.

Cumulative Bitcoin ETF flows have now been in drawdown for over 100 days, a sign that recent price stability has lacked durable demand support. Short-lived inflow streaks have repeatedly failed under market stress, highlighting why confirmation, not optimism, remains the key missing ingredient.
Gold ETF Flows Are Catching Up to Bitcoin
Earlier this week, we looked at how correlation dynamics across macro assets influence Bitcoin’s behavior. One of the key conclusions was that, in the current environment, gold has been quietly benefiting at Bitcoin’s expense.
When you zoom out, that shift becomes very clear.
The chart below compares cumulative net flows into Bitcoin ETFs and gold ETFs since the launch of spot Bitcoin ETFs in early 2024. Bitcoin initially dominated, attracting significantly more capital than gold. But that gap has narrowed sharply over the past few months.
Since November, Bitcoin ETF flows have stalled. Gold ETF flows haven’t. As a result, gold is now only about $6 billion behind Bitcoin’s roughly $58 billion in cumulative net inflows over the same period. And the gap continues to close.
This isn’t happening because gold and Bitcoin are telling different long-term stories. In fact, they share many of the same structural narratives around hard assets and protection against monetary debasement.
The difference shows up in the short term.
Repeated risk-off episodes (many tied to U.S. tariff threats and policy uncertainty since 2025) have consistently favored gold. During those moments, gold tends to attract fresh inflows, while Bitcoin behaves more like a risk asset and struggles to retain momentum.
In other words, even when both assets rise over long horizons, their demand dynamics diverge when uncertainty spikes. And over the past year, those spikes have been frequent enough to steadily tilt relative flows toward gold.
Since Bitcoin ETF flows stalled in late 2025, gold ETFs have continued to accumulate capital, steadily closing the gap. Repeated risk-off episodes have favored gold’s defensive profile, highlighting how short-term demand dynamics (not long-term narratives) are driving relative flows.
Inflation Data Is Not Conducive to Rate Cuts
Markets broadly expect the upcoming FOMC meeting to result in no change to the policy rate.
Part of that expectation is political. Fed Chair Jerome Powell has been explicit that monetary policy will remain data-driven, and cutting rates while facing overt political pressure would require a clear justification in the numbers.
That justification isn’t there.
The labor market hasn’t broken, despite repeated fears over the second half of 2025. And inflation continues to pose essentially the same challenge it did two years ago.
The chart below shows year-on-year PCE inflation, which I remind you is the Fed’s preferred gauge of inflation. Even smoothing out short-term noise and data delays related to the government shutdown, the message is straightforward: inflation has been stuck at elevated levels for roughly two years.
More importantly, it remains well above its pre-COVID range.
That matters because the COVID shock is no longer recent history. We are now nearly six years removed from the 2020 crisis. Year after year of inflation running above target compounds, both economically and politically, and it limits how much flexibility the Federal Reserve has.
Absent a clear downside surprise in inflation or a sudden deterioration in growth, this makes a fast or aggressive rate-cutting cycle unlikely. Cuts may still come eventually, but they are likely to be cautious and conditional rather than front-loaded.
This isn’t a new message from the Fed, and it probably won’t rattle markets on its own. But it does act as a brake on how quickly risk-on assets can expand, even if it lacks the shock value of tariff headlines or geopolitical flare-ups.
PCE inflation has made little net progress for nearly two years and remains well above its pre-COVID range. This persistent plateau limits the Fed’s ability to justify rapid rate cuts absent a clear deterioration in growth or labor conditions.
Tactical Takeaway
The current setup argues for restraint rather than anticipation.
Bitcoin is not facing an outright hostile environment, but it is still operating without durable demand confirmation and without meaningful macro tailwinds. In this kind of market, early signals tend to appear and disappear, and short-lived recoveries are easily interrupted by volatility or shifts in risk appetite.
For investors, the key mistake to avoid is treating stabilization as validation. Until ETF inflows persist through market stress increasing exposure aggressively risks chasing moves that lack reinforcement.
The discipline here is simple: let confirmation set the pace, not conviction. Incremental positioning can make sense, but only if demand and macro signals begin to align rather than diverge.
(Market commentary, not financial advice.)
#BTC #BTCVSGOLD #RateCutExpectations
Parece que los creadores de contenido llevan ya unos meses advirtiendo del inicio del mercado bajista. Tal vez tengan razon, o tal vez eso seria demasiada previsibilidad para un mercado como este. Al mismo tiempo, nos encontramos con unos porcentajes ridiculamente bajos de bajada de tipos de interés por la FED el próximo 28 de enero, y de nuevo, tal vez eso significaría una excesiva capacidad para predecir lo que sucederá en los mercados. Desde la última bajada de tipos en diciembre y tras el discurso de Powell, todo parecía apuntar ya a que los recortes se pausarían, y los datos de inflación y empleo no parecían suficientemente impactantes como para movilizar a la FED en otro dirección. Y por ello en herramientas como Fedwatch llevamos varias semanas con baja probabilidad de bajadas de tipos. Estos días pasados ha aparecido una noticia un tanto sorprendente respecto q la inflación: la herramienta Truflation ha señaldo lecturas de entre el 1.55 y el 1.74% de inflación de precios para enero en el momento actual. Esta herramienta ya se ha adelantado anteriormente a escenarios como los repuntes de inflación de la era COVID a consecuenccia de las políticas expansivas de la FED. Si se da el caso de que se mantienen estas lecturas de cara al día 28, cabría la posibilidad de darle la vuelta a las previsiones de pausa en las bajadas de tipos ya que los datos indicarían que no existe un peligro excesivo en nuevas bajadas para los datos de inflación, ya que tras tres bajadas consecutivas de 25 pb ésta no habría hecho otra cosa que reducirse. Supongo que habrá para ver si estos datos que ya sitúan la inflación dentro fe los objetivos de la FED se mantienen y son suficientes para permitir nuevas bajadas de tipos de interés en el corto plazo. ¿Y vosotros que pensáis, hay hueco para ser optimistas o hemos empezado ya con el ciclo bajista? #bullish #bearish #RateCutExpectations #MarketRebound #HODL
Parece que los creadores de contenido llevan ya unos meses advirtiendo del inicio del mercado bajista. Tal vez tengan razon, o tal vez eso seria demasiada previsibilidad para un mercado como este. Al mismo tiempo, nos encontramos con unos porcentajes ridiculamente bajos de bajada de tipos de interés por la FED el próximo 28 de enero, y de nuevo, tal vez eso significaría una excesiva capacidad para predecir lo que sucederá en los mercados. Desde la última bajada de tipos en diciembre y tras el discurso de Powell, todo parecía apuntar ya a que los recortes se pausarían, y los datos de inflación y empleo no parecían suficientemente impactantes como para movilizar a la FED en otro dirección. Y por ello en herramientas como Fedwatch llevamos varias semanas con baja probabilidad de bajadas de tipos.
Estos días pasados ha aparecido una noticia un tanto sorprendente respecto q la inflación: la herramienta Truflation ha señaldo lecturas de entre el 1.55 y el 1.74% de inflación de precios para enero en el momento actual. Esta herramienta ya se ha adelantado anteriormente a escenarios como los repuntes de inflación de la era COVID a consecuenccia de las políticas expansivas de la FED. Si se da el caso de que se mantienen estas lecturas de cara al día 28, cabría la posibilidad de darle la vuelta a las previsiones de pausa en las bajadas de tipos ya que los datos indicarían que no existe un peligro excesivo en nuevas bajadas para los datos de inflación, ya que tras tres bajadas consecutivas de 25 pb ésta no habría hecho otra cosa que reducirse. Supongo que habrá para ver si estos datos que ya sitúan la inflación dentro fe los objetivos de la FED se mantienen y son suficientes para permitir nuevas bajadas de tipos de interés en el corto plazo. ¿Y vosotros que pensáis, hay hueco para ser optimistas o hemos empezado ya con el ciclo bajista?
#bullish #bearish #RateCutExpectations #MarketRebound #HODL
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Bikovski
The Federal Reserve recently cut interest rates by 25 basis points, bringing the target range to 4.25%-4.5%. This marks the third rate cut this year, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell citing progress in taming inflation and an uncertain economic outlook. #RateCutExpectations ## Key Points - *Rate Cut Expectations*: Analysts anticipate another 25-basis-point cut, with markets pricing in a high probability of this move. - *Quantitative Tightening (QT)*: The Fed might announce an end to QT, potentially offering a buffer for Treasury and impacting market liquidity. - *Future Cuts*: J.P. Morgan Research predicts two more cuts in 2025, followed by one in 2026, depending on economic performance and inflation trends. - *Economic Context*: The US economy shows signs of balance, with slowing job gains and inflation moving toward the Fed's 2% target. ## Implications - *Borrowing Costs*: Lower rates may boost stocks and cryptocurrencies, while benefiting borrowers. - *Market Sentiment*: Investors are watching for clarity on future cuts and QT winding down. The Fed's next move will likely depend on incoming economic data and evolving risks. #RateCutExpectations
The Federal Reserve recently cut interest rates by 25 basis points, bringing the target range to 4.25%-4.5%. This marks the third rate cut this year, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell citing progress in taming inflation and an uncertain economic outlook. #RateCutExpectations

## Key Points
- *Rate Cut Expectations*: Analysts anticipate another 25-basis-point cut, with markets pricing in a high probability of this move.
- *Quantitative Tightening (QT)*: The Fed might announce an end to QT, potentially offering a buffer for Treasury and impacting market liquidity.
- *Future Cuts*: J.P. Morgan Research predicts two more cuts in 2025, followed by one in 2026, depending on economic performance and inflation trends.
- *Economic Context*: The US economy shows signs of balance, with slowing job gains and inflation moving toward the Fed's 2% target.

## Implications
- *Borrowing Costs*: Lower rates may boost stocks and cryptocurrencies, while benefiting borrowers.
- *Market Sentiment*: Investors are watching for clarity on future cuts and QT winding down.
The Fed's next move will likely depend on incoming economic data and evolving risks.
#RateCutExpectations
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Bikovski
🇺🇸 FED will cut rates today at 2 PM ET. If they end QT, the market could explode. Liquidity will flood back in, and risk assets like Bitcoin and stocks will rally hard.$BTC $ETH #RateCutExpectations {spot}(BTCUSDT) {spot}(XRPUSDT)
🇺🇸 FED will cut rates today at 2 PM ET.

If they end QT, the market could explode.
Liquidity will flood back in, and risk assets like Bitcoin and stocks will rally hard.$BTC $ETH
#RateCutExpectations
#RateCutExpectations ‏🔴 El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump habla sobre el proceso de selección de un sucesor para Jerome Powell en el cargo de presidente de la Reserva Federal de EE. UU., con el final del mandato de este último en mayo próximo ◀ Trump ha presionado mucho este año a Powell, dirigiéndole muchas críticas por no reducir las tasas de interés al mismo ritmo que desea el presidente estadounidense ◀ Se espera que la Reserva Federal reduzca las tasas de interés por segunda vez este año durante su reunión de mañana
#RateCutExpectations

‏🔴 El presidente estadounidense Donald Trump habla sobre el proceso de selección de un sucesor para Jerome Powell en el cargo de presidente de la Reserva Federal de EE. UU., con el final del mandato de este último en mayo próximo

◀ Trump ha presionado mucho este año a Powell, dirigiéndole muchas críticas por no reducir las tasas de interés al mismo ritmo que desea el presidente estadounidense

◀ Se espera que la Reserva Federal reduzca las tasas de interés por segunda vez este año durante su reunión de mañana
📣 Headline Post: “All Eyes on the Federal Reserve + Trade Turbulence” 🔍 What’s Happening The Fed is widely expected to cut its benchmark interest rate by ~25 basis points at its upcoming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, bringing the target range to around 3.75 %–4.00 %. At the same time, ongoing tariff pressures (imports, global supply-chain disruptions) are stirring concerns about inflation and growth drag. For example: tariffs may drive up costs for consumers and producers while slowing demand. 📈 Market Implications for the Next Few Days Positive signals: A rate cut would signal a shift toward a more accommodative monetary policy. That tends to boost risk-assets (equities) and reduce borrowing costs, which could support growth. If the Fed softens its language and signals further cuts, investor sentiment may improve quickly. Caution flags: Markets have high expectations for easing. If the Fed doesn’t confirm a clear path of future cuts, you could see a sell-off or yield spikes. Tariff‐driven inflation and supply-chain risk could muddy the waters: higher costs + slower growth = messy mix for markets. #RateCutExpectations
📣 Headline Post: “All Eyes on the Federal Reserve + Trade Turbulence”



🔍 What’s Happening

The Fed is widely expected to cut its benchmark interest rate by ~25 basis points at its upcoming Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, bringing the target range to around 3.75 %–4.00 %.

At the same time, ongoing tariff pressures (imports, global supply-chain disruptions) are stirring concerns about inflation and growth drag. For example: tariffs may drive up costs for consumers and producers while slowing demand.


📈 Market Implications for the Next Few Days

Positive signals:

A rate cut would signal a shift toward a more accommodative monetary policy. That tends to boost risk-assets (equities) and reduce borrowing costs, which could support growth.

If the Fed softens its language and signals further cuts, investor sentiment may improve quickly.


Caution flags:

Markets have high expectations for easing. If the Fed doesn’t confirm a clear path of future cuts, you could see a sell-off or yield spikes.

Tariff‐driven inflation and supply-chain risk could muddy the waters: higher costs + slower growth = messy mix for markets.
#RateCutExpectations
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The Federal Reserve is widely expected to announce an interest rate cut today, October 29, 2025, at the conclusion of its two-day Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. This follows a previous rate cut in September 2025, when the central bank lowered the benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points. Key details about the rate cut: The announcement of the decision is expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT. The move is anticipated to be a 25 basis point cut, which would bring the federal funds rate to a range of 3.75%–4.00%. Markets largely have this move priced in, as economic data has indicated a softening labor market. #RateCutExpectations $BTC {spot}(BTCUSDT)
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to announce an interest rate cut today, October 29, 2025, at the conclusion of its two-day Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. This follows a previous rate cut in September 2025, when the central bank lowered the benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points.
Key details about the rate cut:
The announcement of the decision is expected at 2:00 p.m. EDT.
The move is anticipated to be a 25 basis point cut, which would bring the federal funds rate to a range of 3.75%–4.00%.
Markets largely have this move priced in, as economic data has indicated a softening labor market.
#RateCutExpectations $BTC
@Mona_AIVille : Rate cuts coming. You: 'Buy everything?' Me: 'Wrong. Again.' Q: Sept cut = bull run? A: History lesson: '95/'19 preventive cuts = '01/'08 crisis cuts = (RIP) Q: Where's money flowing? A: Not $BTC. $BTC dominance 65% → 59% Alts cap +50% since July ($1.4T) $ETH stealing spotlight (ETF + RWA) Q: How to play? A: Chase: - Real narratives (#ETH , #RWA ) - Actual cash flow - On-ramp utility Forget shitcoins. #RateCutExpectations #aiville #BullRunAhead #AIV
@Mona AIVille : Rate cuts coming. You: 'Buy everything?' Me: 'Wrong. Again.'

Q: Sept cut = bull run?
A: History lesson:
'95/'19 preventive cuts =
'01/'08 crisis cuts = (RIP)

Q: Where's money flowing?
A: Not $BTC.
$BTC dominance 65% → 59%
Alts cap +50% since July ($1.4T)
$ETH stealing spotlight (ETF + RWA)

Q: How to play?
A: Chase:
- Real narratives (#ETH , #RWA )
- Actual cash flow
- On-ramp utility

Forget shitcoins.

#RateCutExpectations #aiville #BullRunAhead #AIV
🇺🇸 “INTEREST RATES ARE TOO HIGH — RATE CUTS ARE COMING!” That’s right: Donald Trump just called out the soaring interest rates and hinted that relief is on the way. He highlighted that the current rate level is hurting the economy and refinancing costs — and made his demand loud and clear: the time for cuts is now. --- 🔥 Why This Matters High interest rates = higher borrowing costs for mortgages, businesses, and everyday people. A signal that cuts are expected can spark big moves in stock markets, bond markets, and crypto. If relief comes, the ripple effects will echo across global markets — and you want to be positioned before the wave hits. --- ✅ What To Do Stay alert. Prepare. If you’re invested — or thinking of being — the chatter about rate cuts might be the trigger for the next leg up. --- 💡 FOLLOW DXB TRADER 1 for the latest on rates, market shifts, and strategy plays! 👍 Like this post & 🔁 Share with your friends — don’t let them miss what could be a game-changer. $BNB {spot}(BNBUSDT) $XRP {spot}(XRPUSDT) $ASTER {spot}(ASTERUSDT) #MarketPullback #RateCutExpectations #Binance #BTC #Write2Earn
🇺🇸 “INTEREST RATES ARE TOO HIGH — RATE CUTS ARE COMING!”
That’s right: Donald Trump just called out the soaring interest rates and hinted that relief is on the way.

He highlighted that the current rate level is hurting the economy and refinancing costs — and made his demand loud and clear: the time for cuts is now.


---

🔥 Why This Matters

High interest rates = higher borrowing costs for mortgages, businesses, and everyday people.

A signal that cuts are expected can spark big moves in stock markets, bond markets, and crypto.

If relief comes, the ripple effects will echo across global markets — and you want to be positioned before the wave hits.



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✅ What To Do

Stay alert.
Prepare.
If you’re invested — or thinking of being — the chatter about rate cuts might be the trigger for the next leg up.


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U.S. Employment Data Poised to Shape Rate Cut Expectations🚩The U.S. labor market is once again in the spotlight as investors await key employment reports that could heavily influence expectations for upcoming Federal Reserve policy moves. 📊 Data Release Schedule (UTC+8) Aug ADP Employment Report – Tonight, 20:15 (Previous: 104,000 | Forecast: 65,000) Initial Jobless Claims (week ending Aug 30) – Tonight, 20:30 (Previous: 229,000 | Forecast: 230,000) Unemployment Rate & Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) for Aug – Tomorrow, 20:30 Analysts stress that labor data is drawing heightened attention this week, as both U.S. President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell have placed unusual weight on its outcome. A weaker-than-expected report could significantly increase market bets on rate cuts—possibly even sparking speculation of one or more 50 basis point reductions. At the Jackson Hole Symposium, Powell underscored the challenges of balancing government and market expectations for rate cuts with the Fed’s ongoing vigilance on inflation risks, particularly those amplified by tariffs. This delicate policy trade-off means this week’s job figures will play an outsized role in shaping near-term monetary policy sentiment. 💡 The Takeaway Markets are on high alert. Softer employment data may fuel aggressive rate cut expectations, while stronger numbers could temper speculation. Either way, the release is set to be a defining moment for the U.S. monetary policy outlook. 🏦 Market Impact U.S. Dollar (USD): Likely to weaken if data disappoints, as markets price in deeper rate cuts. Strong data could support a rebound. Equities: Softer jobs figures may lift stocks on hopes of looser monetary policy, while stronger employment could pressure risk assets by reducing rate cut bets. Bonds: Treasury yields may fall on weak labor data, reflecting expectations of aggressive easing. Crypto & Gold: Both could benefit from weaker employment numbers, as rate cut speculation often boosts alternative assets. 💡 The Difference: 📚 Mind Awakener signals don’t just give you trade plans—they teach you the strategy too! ✅ Trade safe & stay disciplined! #MarketPullback #USemployementRates #RateCutExpectations #USNonFarmPayrollReport

U.S. Employment Data Poised to Shape Rate Cut Expectations🚩

The U.S. labor market is once again in the spotlight as investors await key employment reports that could heavily influence expectations for upcoming Federal Reserve policy moves.

📊 Data Release Schedule (UTC+8)

Aug ADP Employment Report – Tonight, 20:15 (Previous: 104,000 | Forecast: 65,000)
Initial Jobless Claims (week ending Aug 30) – Tonight, 20:30 (Previous: 229,000 | Forecast: 230,000)
Unemployment Rate & Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) for Aug – Tomorrow, 20:30

Analysts stress that labor data is drawing heightened attention this week, as both U.S. President Donald Trump and Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell have placed unusual weight on its outcome. A weaker-than-expected report could significantly increase market bets on rate cuts—possibly even sparking speculation of one or more 50 basis point reductions.

At the Jackson Hole Symposium, Powell underscored the challenges of balancing government and market expectations for rate cuts with the Fed’s ongoing vigilance on inflation risks, particularly those amplified by tariffs. This delicate policy trade-off means this week’s job figures will play an outsized role in shaping near-term monetary policy sentiment.

💡 The Takeaway

Markets are on high alert. Softer employment data may fuel aggressive rate cut expectations, while stronger numbers could temper speculation. Either way, the release is set to be a defining moment for the U.S. monetary policy outlook.

🏦 Market Impact

U.S. Dollar (USD): Likely to weaken if data disappoints, as markets price in deeper rate cuts. Strong data could support a rebound.
Equities: Softer jobs figures may lift stocks on hopes of looser monetary policy, while stronger employment could pressure risk assets by reducing rate cut bets.
Bonds: Treasury yields may fall on weak labor data, reflecting expectations of aggressive easing.
Crypto & Gold: Both could benefit from weaker employment numbers, as rate cut speculation often boosts alternative assets.

💡 The Difference:

📚 Mind Awakener signals don’t just give you trade plans—they teach you the strategy too!

✅ Trade safe & stay disciplined!

#MarketPullback #USemployementRates #RateCutExpectations #USNonFarmPayrollReport
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Bikovski
🚨 U.S. ECONOMY BRACES FOR ANOTHER SHOCK 💥 🏦 Fed on High Alert Markets are now pricing in a 96–98% probability of a 25 bps rate cut at the upcoming Federal Reserve meeting — reflecting growing fears of deeper economic weakness. 📉 ⚙️ Chip Supply Crunch China-owned Nexperia, a major supplier of auto transistors and diodes, has been hit with export restrictions, halting the flow of key components vital for U.S. car manufacturing. 🚗💡 🏭 Industrial Fallout Factories could face 2–4 weeks of disruptions if supply doesn’t restart soon, putting billions in U.S. output at risk as automakers scramble to maintain production. 💰🔧 🌐 Bigger Picture This goes beyond market sentiment — it’s a real-world stress test for America’s industrial base amid escalating global trade and tech tensions. ⚡ #CPIWatchToo #RateCutExpectations #FederalReserve #TradeTensionsEase #Write2Earn!
🚨 U.S. ECONOMY BRACES FOR ANOTHER SHOCK 💥
🏦 Fed on High Alert
Markets are now pricing in a 96–98% probability of a 25 bps rate cut at the upcoming Federal Reserve meeting — reflecting growing fears of deeper economic weakness. 📉

⚙️ Chip Supply Crunch
China-owned Nexperia, a major supplier of auto transistors and diodes, has been hit with export restrictions, halting the flow of key components vital for U.S. car manufacturing. 🚗💡

🏭 Industrial Fallout
Factories could face 2–4 weeks of disruptions if supply doesn’t restart soon, putting billions in U.S. output at risk as automakers scramble to maintain production. 💰🔧

🌐 Bigger Picture
This goes beyond market sentiment — it’s a real-world stress test for America’s industrial base amid escalating global trade and tech tensions. ⚡

#CPIWatchToo #RateCutExpectations #FederalReserve #TradeTensionsEase #Write2Earn!
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