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What Fed Rate Expectations Reveal: Market Pricing in a Holdout Through July
Based on the latest CME Fed Watch tool data from July 21, the financial markets are sending a clear message about near-term Federal Reserve policy: rates are almost certainly staying put this month. The data shows a 95.3% probability that the Federal Reserve will maintain current interest rates when it concludes its July meeting, while just 4.7% of market participants are pricing in a 25 basis point cut.
September Signals a Shift: The Rate Cut Debate Intensifies
Where things get interesting is the September outlook. Here, the narrative changes significantly. The probability that rates remain unchanged drops to 39.3%, suggesting markets are increasingly pricing in policy adjustments ahead. This is where the cumulative probability of rate reductions becomes the focal point: traders are assigning a combined 58% probability that the Federal Reserve will implement a cumulative 25 basis point reduction by September, while a smaller 2.7% probability is assigned to a more aggressive cumulative reduction of 50 basis points.
What This Means for Markets
The CME data paints a picture of a two-phase outlook. July appears locked in as a hold-pattern month, giving the Federal Reserve breathing room to assess economic conditions. However, September emerges as the potential inflection point, where cumulative probability distributions suggest meaningful policy shifts could materialize. For traders and investors, this divergence between near-term stability and medium-term potential cuts offers a crucial signal about where market participants believe economic pressures may be building.