Governor Bullock clarified that a rate cut was not considered or even suggested as an option at the December meeting and that the 2026 discussions are likely to be around whether to leave rates at 3.6% or increase them. The Board is uncomfortable with where inflation is and private demand is now taking over from the public sector and so further easing is not “on the horizon for the foreseeable future”. Rates will continue to be decided on a meeting-by-meeting basis and be driven by the data.
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Indeed NY's Williams has already begun pointing to potential for balance sheet re-expansion to begin again, with "reserve management" purchases intended to keep Fed liabilities rising in line with market demand:


The Fed's latest H.4.1 release on Nov 5 showed reserves picked up from the prior week's post-2020 lows to $2.85T, up $24B in the latest week but still down $182B over the last month.


A few highlights from the Fed's latest Financial Stability report out today (link):