Dow Jones Industrial Average Adds 200 Points As Fed Rate Cut Expectations Climb
Image Source: Unsplash
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) found some room on the high side on Monday, kicking off a holiday-shortened trading week with a 200-point jump to retest the 46,500 region. Equity indexes are broadly in a recovery stance following a shaky week at the tail-end of quarterly earnings season, but US major indexes still remain in the red for the month of November.
Hopes for a December rate cut remain elevated
Broad market hopes for the Federal Reserve (Fed) to deliver a third straight interest rate cut in December are holding on the high side on Monday. According to the CME’s FedWatch Tool, rate traders are pricing in nearly 80% odds of a 25-basis-point rate trim on December 10. There’s still plenty of wiggle room, however, with over 98% odds that the Fed will deliver another rate cut by January 28 if a December cut fails to materialize.
Thanks to the longest US government shutdown in history, the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) has delayed the release of October and November labor and employment data until after the Fed’s interest rate decision. It will hold the key figures back until December 16. This leaves the Fed with little meaningful data to gauge interest rate moves, and it could vex hopes of a rate cut in the coming weeks.
US Producer Price Index (PPI) data due Tuesday could attract more market attention than usual. Still, the well-defined inflation category specifically excludes foreign-made or imported goods. It will provide little direct information on how the Trump administration’s scattershot tariff policies are affecting business costs beyond indirect price impacts.
AI rally continues to drive the broader market
The AI-fueled tech trade is back on the front burner after a defensive drop last week, sparked by ongoing concerns that all of the demand for LLM-powering microchips isn’t generating actual front-end revenue for the AI industry at large. Fears are growing that double-digit quarterly revenue growth for silicon-punching AI darling Nvidia (NVDA) may run out of roadway sooner rather than later.
Circular lending strategies that largely reinvent structured financial vehicles with no actual money involved have struck the tech sector as AI giants, and the shovel-sellers that supply them with compute power, have become the rule rather than the exception. Investors are growing fearful that the music may stop without enough chairs for everyone to sit.
Despite the ongoing funding fears, Nvidia is back on the rise on Monday, gaining around 2.25% at the time of writing and climbing back above $180 per share.
Dow Jones daily chart
(Click on image to enlarge)

More By This Author:
Dow Jones Industrial Average Rebounds On Hopeful FridayGBP/USD Finds Thin Technical Support Ahead Of Global PMIs
Dow Jones Industrial Average Flops As Headwinds Mount, Declines 300 Points