Fed's 2026 Rate Cut Script: Will Continuous Easing Fall Short of Expectations?

Deep News
Oct 27

Financial markets have already scripted 2026: The Federal Reserve will smoothly execute a series of rate cuts, offering respite to investors after one of the most aggressive tightening cycles in decades.

Futures traders are betting on this scenario, and options markets have priced it in. Most investors expect rates to fall to the 2.75%-3.0% range by year-end 2026—a full 1.25 percentage points below the current 4%-4.25% range, per CME’s FedWatch Tool.

Wall Street analysts concur. Citigroup predicts cuts in December, January, and March as the labor market weakens; Pantheon Macroeconomics foresees at least three reductions in March, June, and September; Morgan Stanley projects five, citing slowing growth and cooling inflation as catalysts for Fed stimulus.

But here’s the catch: The Fed disagrees.

While traders envision a steady downtrend, policymakers paint a more nuanced picture—slower cuts with prolonged pauses between moves. This disconnect could spell disappointment for investors and turbulence in financial markets next year.

The data tells the tale. In September, the median Fed projection placed the 2026 year-end rate at 3.4%, just 0.2 percentage points below 2025’s forecast—far from the market’s 2.75%-3.0% expectation.

Why the caution? The Fed’s dual mandate of maximum employment and price stability isn’t flashing urgent signals. Officials project 2026 core inflation at 2.6%, still above the 2% target, with unemployment hovering near 4.4%.

A 25-basis-point cut this week appears nearly certain—especially after Friday’s delayed September CPI report showed inflation at 3%, below forecasts, with tariff impacts remaining muted.

Crucially, the Fed’s projections reflect individual views, not consensus. As former Fed economist Claudia Sahm noted, the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) median “is not, and never will be, the Fed’s official forecast.” Still, it remains the clearest roadmap to policymakers’ thinking.

Complicating matters, new Fed appointees in 2026 could reshape policy debates.

Chair Powell’s term ends in May 2026, though he could remain on the Board until 2028. Stephen Miran, a Trump economic advisor confirmed in September, will serve until January 2026—likely succeeded by a Trump-nominated chair. Legal battles over Governor Cook add uncertainty; a Supreme Court ruling in January on her removal case could shift the Board’s voting balance and set a precedent for dismissing governors.

“If the Trump administration’s agenda had one guiding principle, it’d be ‘personnel is policy,’” said BNY Investments’ Vincent Reinhart. “A new majority at the Fed would likely favor steep, rapid cuts.” He predicts rates could bottom near 2.5%, with easing continuing until economic or market forces intervene.

Regional Fed presidents rotating into voting seats next year—including Cleveland’s Mester (hawkish), Philadelphia’s Harker, Dallas’s Logan, and Minneapolis’s Kashkari—further cloud the outlook. Their mix of pragmatism and inflation vigilance suggests preset cut timelines are unlikely.

Mester recently warned that inflation has overshot for 4.5 years, necessitating restrictive policy. Kashkari cautioned that aggressive cuts could reignite price pressures, while Logan stressed “careful” adjustments to hit 2% inflation.

2026’s economic backdrop adds challenges: Tariffs may lift inflation, complicating easing; consumer spending, though resilient, shows cracks; and labor market softness (unemployment rose to 4.3% in August, with layoffs up 66% year-to-date) could force more cuts if sustained.

American Century’s Joyce Huang expects just one 2026 cut, anticipating a second-half rebound from Trump-era stimulus and high-income spending. “Three cuts totaling 0.75 points would near the terminal rate,” she said.

The Fed’s 2026 playbook may resemble “cut-pause-reassess” cycles—not the market’s priced-in steady easing. This expectations gap will be next year’s defining theme.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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