#以太坊大户持仓变化 $BTC $ETH $BNB 🔥 What will the liquidity landscape look like in 2026? This topic is currently a hot issue. The Federal Reserve's interest rate cut pace directly affects our asset allocation, so we need to keep a close eye on it.
Recently, the dot plot was released, and Fed officials appeared quite cautious—the majority expect only one rate cut next year, and all decisions will depend on data. Sounds a bit conservative, right?
But the market isn't so pessimistic. Looking at interest rate futures and forecasts from major institutions like Goldman Sachs, the mainstream view is that there could be two rate cuts in 2026, possibly in March and June. That's quite a gap.
The key questions are still inflation and employment—these two fundamentals. As long as these data points look good, rate cut expectations can be realized. Also, don't forget that the Federal Reserve will have personnel changes next year; the new leadership team might change the policy pace in the second half of the year. These are variables to watch out for this year.
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TokenSherpa
· 12h ago
actually, let me break this down—the fed dot plot discrepancy you're highlighting here is kinda the whole game rn. one cut vs two cuts is literally the difference between "hodl tight" and "this could get spicy" for liquidity flows into crypto next year.
Reply0
BearMarketMonk
· 12h ago
The Federal Reserve is playing word games again, whether it's one or two rate cuts. To put it simply, it all depends on whether inflation is willing to cooperate. Who can say for sure right now?
View OriginalReply0
ReverseTrendSister
· 01-08 22:26
Will there be 1 or 2 interest rate cuts, just a small difference... The Fed folks really know how to play tricks. If the data looks good, they'll give it; if not, they won't. Anyway, the retail investors just have to guess.
View OriginalReply0
StakoorNeverSleeps
· 01-08 08:04
Whether it decreases once or twice, honestly it all depends on how inflation moves. The folks at the Federal Reserve are now like marionettes.
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FundingMartyr
· 01-06 17:00
The Fed officials' dot plot is so different from Goldman Sachs, indicating that no one can be certain... It's mainly about watching inflation data and acting accordingly.
View OriginalReply0
ProbablyNothing
· 01-06 16:59
Expectations of rate cuts depend on the data again? Fine, anyway, we retail investors are just waiting to be cut, and the market will replay three times with just one Federal Reserve statement.
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FomoAnxiety
· 01-06 16:50
The Federal Reserve is playing psychological games again. They promised to cut interest rates but haven't done so once, and now they want to pretend to be cautious... Will they really cut twice next year? I'm a bit skeptical.
View OriginalReply0
VitaliksTwin
· 01-06 16:37
Federal Reserve officials play it conservative, but the market is betting on two rate cuts. The difference could be a killer... Most likely, it will still depend on employment data in the end.
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staking_gramps
· 01-06 16:33
Federal Reserve officials say one rate cut, Goldman Sachs predicts two cuts. How many basis points is that difference? It's really outrageous.
#以太坊大户持仓变化 $BTC $ETH $BNB 🔥 What will the liquidity landscape look like in 2026? This topic is currently a hot issue. The Federal Reserve's interest rate cut pace directly affects our asset allocation, so we need to keep a close eye on it.
Recently, the dot plot was released, and Fed officials appeared quite cautious—the majority expect only one rate cut next year, and all decisions will depend on data. Sounds a bit conservative, right?
But the market isn't so pessimistic. Looking at interest rate futures and forecasts from major institutions like Goldman Sachs, the mainstream view is that there could be two rate cuts in 2026, possibly in March and June. That's quite a gap.
The key questions are still inflation and employment—these two fundamentals. As long as these data points look good, rate cut expectations can be realized. Also, don't forget that the Federal Reserve will have personnel changes next year; the new leadership team might change the policy pace in the second half of the year. These are variables to watch out for this year.