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Don't keep betting on the Fed cutting interest rates. The latest interest rate futures data is very revealing: the probability of a rate cut in January is only 5%, in other words, there is a 95% chance that interest rates will stay put. Even for the seemingly slightly "more reliable" March, the chance of a 25 basis point cut is only 20.8%, with the majority 78.4% still maintaining the status quo. As for a 50 basis point cut? Don't even think about it, the probability is less than 1%.
Rather than saying the Fed is wavering, it's more accurate to say they have already made a decision — high interest rates are not going to change in the short term. Those who early on bet heavily on "rate cut expectations" should wake up now. What does a prolonged interest rate cycle mean? The entire asset allocation logic needs to be recalculated.
Why is the Fed so hawkish? Looking at the actual data makes it clear. In December, the core CPI year-over-year increase was 2.6%, although it hit a multi-year low, it still lags 0.6 percentage points behind the 2% target. Even more painful is that sticky inflation in services and rentals is still causing trouble; it can't be suppressed in the short term. Fed officials like Goolsbee have explicitly stated that the top priority now is to bring inflation thoroughly below 2%, and Schmidt has directly opposed any new round of rate cuts. The simple reason is — if inflation hasn't stabilized, rushing to cut rates is like lighting a match to a rebound in prices. Even the most hawkish Fed officials wouldn't be so foolish.