Ground Floor, The Sotheby Building, Rodney Village, Rodney Bay, Gros-Islet, Saint Lucia, Post code (Rodney Bay): LC01 401

Ground Floor, The Sotheby Building, Rodney Village, Rodney Bay, Gros-Islet, Saint Lucia, Post code (Rodney Bay): LC01 401
[email protected]
+971 444-885-37
Trading

  • Open an account
  • Account types
  • Markets
  • Platforms
  • Trading conditions
Services

  • News
  • Dashboard
Miscellaneous

  • Documents
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms of Service

© 2025 Primаx

primaxbroker.com is owned by PrimaX Ltd.

PrimaX Ltd adheres to international standards in the field of KYC and AML policy, as well as risk disclosure. Copying of materials without the consent of the company’s management is prohibited.

Currently, PrimaX Ltd provides services related to business involving virtual assets through the implementation of a trading platform and tools available via the website or for download, for trading cryptocurrencies, CFDs/Forex, and other financial instruments, in accordance with the legal opinion dated January 8, 2025.

Disclaimer and Risk Notice:

The information on the website does not constitute investment advice. Please remember that activities in the financial markets involve risks and may result in partial or total loss of funds.

The brokerage company PrimaX does not provide services to U.S. citizens.

  1. Home
  2. Service
  3. News
  4. What would the F...rts by December?

Categories

AllCompanyСryptocurrencyEconomy
  • Home
  • Copytrading
  • Affiliate program
  • News
  • About

    Sign In

Loading...

10.11.2025

Loading...

10.11.2025

What would the Fed do if there are no new jobs or inflation reports by December?

02.11.2025
Economy
What would the Fed do if there are no new jobs or inflation reports by December?
What would the Fed do if there are no new jobs or inflation reports by December?

The Federal Reserve may continue cutting rates in December.

The Federal Reserve could proceed with another rate cut in December even if it remains “flying blind” due to the ongoing government shutdown delaying key jobs and inflation data, Bank of America said in a Tuesday note to clients.

The note outlines several possible scenarios for how policymakers might act if new economic figures are not available before the meeting.

A slim majority of Fed officials, likely including Chair Jerome Powell, already viewed downside labor-market risks as significant enough to justify “at least 75bp of cuts this year,” BofA economists Aditya Bhave and Matthew Yep said.

Without new evidence, that group would likely prefer to “follow through on the September dot plot,” while some doves could argue that a prolonged shutdown “amplifies downside risks to activity.”

However, the hawkish camp may resist additional easing. Seven FOMC participants penciled in just one cut this year, and Bank of America expects four of them — Barr, Goolsbee, Musalem and Schmid — to hold that line.

While they are not expected to dissent against a single cut this week, “a third cut might be a step too far,” economists said, especially if state jobless claims remain steady.

This could lead to “at least one hawkish dissent in December, in addition to a likely dovish dissent from Miran," they added. 

If the government reopens by late November, a delayed September jobs report could arrive before the Fed meeting, but “a single strong print will not convince Powell to go back on hold," economists emphasized. 

If data for both September and October become available, a pause could be considered “if the unemployment rate stays flat at 4.3% and activity data are solid.”

Should the shutdown end early enough for the Bureau of Labor Statistics to catch up fully, economists said the Fed’s December decision would hinge on whether the November unemployment rate falls to 4.3% or rises toward 4.5%.

“If we’re at 4.4%, the December decision will be a close call, and will hinge on the broader data flow (including inflation),” they said.

The consumer price index (CPI) rose 0.3% in September, last week’s report showed, putting the annual inflation rate at 3%, slightly below expectations for 0.4% and 3.1%. The year-over-year figure marked a modest 0.1-point increase from August.

Excluding food and energy, core CPI gained 0.2% on the month and 3% on the year, compared with forecasts of 0.3% and 3.1%. That’s a slowdown from consecutive 0.3% monthly gains recorded in July and August.

The CPI report, which solidified the case for another interest rate cut this week, was the only major economic release permitted during the government shutdown.

More like this
Analysis of China's 15th Five-year Plan and its impact on markets
09.11.2025
Are currency ructions and crypto demand linked? Morgan Stanley investigates
09.11.2025
Strategy prices €620 million preferred stock offering
07.11.2025
Previous article

IBM’s quantum bet could finally pay off - IBM's next big breakthrough will be driven by the smallest of factors.

Next article

Analysis of China's 15th Five-year Plan and its impact on markets - China's newly proposed 15th five-year plan offers long-term growth ambitions but few concrete policy commitments, according to market strategists.