Heading into 2026, U.S. rates face an unusual setup — disinflation has hit a wall, growth patterns look choppy, and cracks are starting to show in the labor market. After treasuries had a solid run in 2025, the question now is whether the Fed can actually deliver the aggressive rate cuts that traders are pricing in. The math might not add up. When inflation refuses to cool further and employment signals turn mixed, central banks tend to move cautiously. Markets may be getting ahead of themselves here, betting on relief that the data doesn't yet support.
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Liquidated_Larry
· 21h ago
The Fed will definitely not make significant rate cuts; this market move is purely self-delusion.
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UnluckyValidator
· 12-06 17:31
The market is getting a bit too hyped this time—even before any data is out, people are already dreaming about rate cuts... But with inflation stubbornly stuck and employment starting to fluctuate, how could the Fed possibly make any drastic cuts?
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SatoshiChallenger
· 12-06 17:29
Ironically, yet another wave of "rate cut savior" theories has emerged. Data shows that employment signals have already turned mixed, but traders are still piling money in.
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TxFailed
· 12-05 20:04
ngl, traders are doing that classic thing again where they price in fairy tales instead of actual data. technically speaking, the fed's gonna pump the brakes hard once reality hits 'em in the face. seen this movie before and it never ends well lmao
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DarkPoolWatcher
· 12-05 20:04
The market is hyping itself up again. Do you really think the same story from 2023 can repeat itself? Inflation is stuck, employment is unstable, so what reason does the Fed have to make significant rate cuts? The data simply doesn't support such high expectations.
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JustHodlIt
· 12-05 19:55
The market is dreaming again with this wave, traders really dare to imagine. The data isn’t even out yet and they’re already speculating on rate cuts? Inflation is still stuck there, employment is unstable too—how could the Fed possibly ease up? Wake up, everyone.
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AirdropNinja
· 12-05 19:39
A bunch of data is conflicting, and the Fed wants a plot twist? That's just wishful thinking.
Heading into 2026, U.S. rates face an unusual setup — disinflation has hit a wall, growth patterns look choppy, and cracks are starting to show in the labor market. After treasuries had a solid run in 2025, the question now is whether the Fed can actually deliver the aggressive rate cuts that traders are pricing in. The math might not add up. When inflation refuses to cool further and employment signals turn mixed, central banks tend to move cautiously. Markets may be getting ahead of themselves here, betting on relief that the data doesn't yet support.