The labor market hasn't been deteriorating fast enough to justify a delay until early 2026 for another rate cut. That's the reality of where we stand. Inflation? Still sitting above target after four and a half years straight. Any momentum we had is basically frozen. Businesses and consumers keep hammering home the same message—prices remain their biggest headache. Until that shifts significantly, expect continued pressure on policy decisions.
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CascadingDipBuyer
· 18h ago
Inflation is so stubborn, how can we still wait until mid-next year? I think the Fed should have acted already.
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HypotheticalLiquidator
· 18h ago
The labor market isn't so bad that it can be delayed until 2026, and this logic simply doesn't hold. Inflation is still damn above the target? Four and a half years and it hasn't come down yet, this is a sign of systemic risk... With such stubborn price pressures, policy space is being completely blocked, and borrowing rates will only become tighter and tighter.
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UnluckyValidator
· 18h ago
Damn, this inflation really just can't be brought down no matter what. No wonder money is worth less and less this year.
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LuckyBearDrawer
· 18h ago
Inflation is so stubborn, will interest rate cuts have to wait until early 2026? That might be overly optimistic.
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FallingLeaf
· 18h ago
It's the same old story... Inflation just won't come down, and the central bank is really going to have a hard time.
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OnChainDetective
· 18h ago
Wait a minute, the labor market isn't that bad yet to wait until 2026 to cut interest rates? That logic seems a bit off. I checked the on-chain fund flow, and large transfers have become active again in the past two weeks. It seems like institutions are pushing something...
The labor market hasn't been deteriorating fast enough to justify a delay until early 2026 for another rate cut. That's the reality of where we stand. Inflation? Still sitting above target after four and a half years straight. Any momentum we had is basically frozen. Businesses and consumers keep hammering home the same message—prices remain their biggest headache. Until that shifts significantly, expect continued pressure on policy decisions.