Equity Markets: The Fed’s Pause Sparks Caution

25 bp rate cut and the message that it’s “the last of the season,” initial euphoria gives way to reflection

Stocks 30/10/2025 4FT News
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Equity Markets: The Fed’s Pause Sparks Caution

After a 25 bp rate cut and the message that it’s “the last of the season,” initial euphoria gives way to reflection on valuations and the future direction of indices.

Market Overview

On Wednesday, October 29, 2025, the Federal Reserve announced a 25-basis-point cut in the federal funds rate, setting the new target range at 3.75%–4.00%. U.S. equity markets reacted mixedly: the S&P 500 was almost unchanged, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped about 0.2% (−74 points to 47,632), while the Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5%.
On the bond side, the 10-year Treasury yield climbed to around 4.056% (from ~3.99%).

In his statement and press conference, Chair Jerome Powell reaffirmed that the labor market remains resilient, though softening, and that inflation—while easing—remains above target. He also noted that “an additional rate cut in December is far from guaranteed.” Finally, Powell announced that the Fed plans to end quantitative tightening (QT) starting in December.

Macroeconomic backdrop:

  • CPI inflation (Sept 2025): +3.0% YoY (up from 2.9% in August)
  • Atlanta Fed GDPNow (Q3): +3.9% annualized real growth
  • Forecasts: GDP expected to slow to ~1.7% in 2025 and ~1.4% in 2026
  • Labor market: hiring momentum cooling, justifying the rate cut

Market Reaction — Yesterday and Today

Yesterday (decision day):
The cut was widely expected, prompting a moderate initial rally on lower-financing hopes and Fed support for employment. However, Powell’s comments—signaling no further cuts in 2025—tempered optimism. The Dow −0.2%, S&P flat, Nasdaq +0.5%. Bond yields rose, reflecting reduced expectations for more easing.

Today (following session):
Sentiment turned mixed. Early optimism around AI and tech investment continues to lift selective sectors (tech, AI capex), yet overall caution prevails as investors weigh high valuations and a less-dovish Fed. The 2-year Treasury yield rose, hinting at expectations of higher-for-longer rates.
In short: no broad “risk-on” rally—rather, a guarded bias toward growth/tech stocks, moderated by Fed rhetoric.

Outlook and Scenarios for Equities

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Base scenario (most likely):
Equities continue in a selective risk-on environment:

  • Tech/AI stocks outperform thanks to strong investment flows and sentiment.
  • Cyclical/credit-sensitive sectors gain less amid slower growth and softer labor data.
  • Valuations remain a concern as the Fed warns rates may stay high longer.
  • European and EM equities may benefit from global liquidity but face external risks (trade, China slowdown, credit).
    => U.S. indices could trade in a moderately positive range, with financials and value names more volatile if yields rise.

Bullish scenario:
If data surprise positively (inflation drops, jobs rebound, AI investment surges), the Fed could turn more accommodative—fueling a broader rally, especially in the Nasdaq/growth space. Yet Powell’s hints that no December cut is likely make this scenario less probable.

Risk scenario:
If inflation re-accelerates or job data deteriorate, the Fed might pivot hawkish, erasing hopes for sustained easing. In that case, yields rise, the dollar strengthens, and equities—especially growth—face pressure. Expect rotation toward defensive sectors and higher volatility.

Practical Implications for Investors

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  • Maintain a balanced allocation: growth/tech (AI, cloud, semiconductors) + defensive/value exposure (utilities, staples).
  • Watch 2- to 5-year Treasury yields: higher yields can compress equity valuations.
  • Track macro releases (CPI, PCE, jobs, business investment).
  • Don’t price in another December cut—Fed and models suggest it’s unlikely.
  • Beware of valuation froth: Powell noted equity prices are “somewhat elevated.”

In Summary

The Fed’s move and Powell’s remarks outline a phase of moderate monetary accommodation, not an outright stimulus. The 25 bp cut addresses a cooling labor market and still-elevated inflation. Markets welcomed the news, then retraced as Powell cooled expectations for more easing.

Going forward, indices may keep rising, led by tech and AI, but upside is limited. Investors should focus on selectivity, disciplined risk-taking, and data-driven positioning rather than betting on a prolonged easing cycle.

The information herein is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice, an offer, or a recommendation to invest.
Data and opinions reflect conditions at the time of writing and may change without notice. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
Investment decisions are made at the investor’s own responsibility, after considering personal financial circumstances and objectives.