$BTC $ETH Recently, there has been an interesting phenomenon—the rate cut has arrived, but the market has actually fallen. It seems contradictory, but a closer look makes it clear.
There are actually three key points. First, the expectations for a rate cut next year have been cut back. Internal Federal Reserve data shows that only one rate cut is planned for 2025, but the market had previously anticipated three. This gap is significant enough that investor expectations shifted from three to one, and disappointment immediately followed.
Second, the probability of the next rate cut has dropped to around 55%. What does this mean? It indicates that the room for future policy easing might be much smaller than expected. Uncertainty has increased, and the market naturally becomes more cautious.
The most poignant point is that Powell explicitly raised the threshold for a rate cut this time, reaffirming the Federal Reserve's independence and policy flexibility. There was a similar signal in history, and what was the result? The rate cut was directly paused for nine months. Clearly, investors are comparing this to that period.
So what the market is anxious about now is not the rate cut itself, but the fear that the subsequent easing cycle might suddenly come to a halt or slow down significantly. Expectations have been adjusted, and the market trend has naturally shifted accordingly. That’s why, despite the rate cut news, the market saw a decline.
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DAOTruant
· 2025-12-15 22:23
Basically, it's just an expectation gap, from three times to once. Who can handle this disparity... Powell's move this time is a bit aggressive, feeling like he's laying the groundwork for future rate hikes.
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RumbleValidator
· 2025-12-14 09:20
55% chance? That's the problem—the high level of uncertainty makes the network unstable. The market reaction is still early; the real killer is the expectation gap.
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RektRecorder
· 2025-12-13 18:51
Oh no, it's another case of the expected gap, changing three times and only once, no wonder it’s falling.
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APY追逐者
· 2025-12-13 18:47
It's the same story again: rate cuts lead to declines, the market is just so greedy.
From three times to once, whoever takes over will be disappointed.
Powell raising the hurdle is really recreating that nine-month nightmare.
So now it's a gamble on whether there will be a sudden brake later; the uncertainty is the most painful.
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MEVSandwich
· 2025-12-13 18:42
Well, to be honest, it's the disappointment in expectations that caused the drop, not the rate cut itself.
From three times to once, the market is devastated.
55% probability? They're just paving the way for what’s next, warning us all.
What Powell is doing—those nine months of pause—really left traders with psychological scars.
Rather than saying the rate cut is a good thing, it's more like the market is panicking and expecting more shocks.
This wave of decline was really a counterattack by our own expectations.
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BearMarketHustler
· 2025-12-13 18:33
It's the same pattern again. Lowering interest rates but still falling. Ultimately, it's all about expectation differences. Can we not be disappointed after three changes?
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SpeakWithHatOn
· 2025-12-13 18:29
The expectation of rate cuts has been cut three times, and this is the real killer... The 50-50 chance essentially means investors are betting on the Federal Reserve's mood.
$BTC $ETH Recently, there has been an interesting phenomenon—the rate cut has arrived, but the market has actually fallen. It seems contradictory, but a closer look makes it clear.
There are actually three key points. First, the expectations for a rate cut next year have been cut back. Internal Federal Reserve data shows that only one rate cut is planned for 2025, but the market had previously anticipated three. This gap is significant enough that investor expectations shifted from three to one, and disappointment immediately followed.
Second, the probability of the next rate cut has dropped to around 55%. What does this mean? It indicates that the room for future policy easing might be much smaller than expected. Uncertainty has increased, and the market naturally becomes more cautious.
The most poignant point is that Powell explicitly raised the threshold for a rate cut this time, reaffirming the Federal Reserve's independence and policy flexibility. There was a similar signal in history, and what was the result? The rate cut was directly paused for nine months. Clearly, investors are comparing this to that period.
So what the market is anxious about now is not the rate cut itself, but the fear that the subsequent easing cycle might suddenly come to a halt or slow down significantly. Expectations have been adjusted, and the market trend has naturally shifted accordingly. That’s why, despite the rate cut news, the market saw a decline.