S&P 500 Investors Still Wondering If Rate Cuts Will Be On Fed's Menu
The S&P 500 (Index: SPX) ended the trading week at 6,259.75, down 0.31% from the previous week's close. Coincidentally, it was also down 0.33% from the new record high of 6,280.46 per share it recorded on Thursday, 10 July 2025.
Another week has come and gone in 2025 and once again, U.S. stock investors are stuck trying to guess whether or not the Federal Reserve will put interest rate cuts on the menu, and if they do, when they will do it.
If you scroll down to our summary of the week's market moving headlines, you'll find lots of coy game-playing by Fed officials, some who drop hints of rate cuts to come or others who suggest they just can't read the economy well enough without lots more data that might make a decision for them.
As for what investor expectations are, the CME Group's FedWatch Tool was mostly unchanged from the preceding week. It continues to project the Fed will hold the Federal Funds Rate in a target range of 4.25-4.50% until its 17 September (2025-Q3) meeting, when it is expected to cut the rate by a quarter percent. Beyond that date, the FedWatch tool anticipates additional quarter point rate cuts on 10 December (2025-Q4), 18 March (2026-Q1), and 17 June (2026-Q2).
That last date is a new development and is interesting because the latest update of the alternative futures chart shows the index' trajectory is consistent with investors focusing their forwarding looking attention on the distant future quarter of 2026-Q2.
In recent editions of the S&P 500 chaos series, we have been running with the interpretation that investors were setting 2025-Q2 as their investment time horizon and the index was simply running to the underside of the middle of the alternative future chart's projection for that quarter. But the longer it tracks with the projection associated with 2026-Q2 combined with the addition of a potentially compelling reason for why that distant future quarter might hold the attention of investors is leading us to think investors may indeed have shifted their attention to it. At the very least, we cannot rule it out at this point of time.
We'll find out more with the random onset of new information from the newstreams. Much like the ones that drove the market's movements during the week that was....
Monday, 7 July 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minions see impact of inflation in Japan's economy:
- Better than expected economic news in Eurozone:
- U.S. stocks end in the red as new Trump tariffs weaken the markets
Tuesday, 8 July 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Chief Fed minion drawing political fire for not acting to cut U.S. interest rates:
- Bigger stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minions worry about impact of inflation of rice prices in Japan:
- U.S. stocks extend losses after Trump targets copper, says no tariff deadline extension
Wednesday, 9 July 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions having trouble reading the U.S. economy:
- Bigger stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minions happy to see less inflation, thinking about pausing interest rate hikes:
- ECB minions take time out from worrying about tariffs to worry about everything else:
- Stocks snap two-day losing streak, Nasdaq ends at record as Nvidia hits $4T in market cap
Thursday, 10 July 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions thinking about two rate cuts later in 2025, want to keep shedding assets off balance sheet:
- Bigger stimulus developing in China:
- S&P 500, Nasdaq notch record closes after solid bond sale, lack of tariff surprises
Friday, 11 July 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minion ready to keep waiting for data they want to see to justify inaction:
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minions say Japan's economy doing okay with U.S. tariffs:
- ECB minions send mixed messages about direction for Eurozone interest rates:
- S&P 500 ends down as tariffs sour sentiment
The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tool projection of real GDP growth in the U.S. during the current quarter of 2025-Q2 dipped to +2.6% from the +2.9% level forecast the previous week.
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