🔥 Gate Square Event: #PostToWinNIGHT 🔥
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📅 Event Duration: Dec 10 08:00 - Dec 21 16:00 UTC
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Last night, while watching CME's Federal Reserve observation tool, I noticed a pretty interesting phenomenon. The market is no longer debating whether the Fed will cut rates; everyone is now arguing about when and by how much. This subtle shift in expectations might be more worth pondering than the data itself.
Let's look at some key figures:
For the January meeting next year, the market assigns a 24.4% chance of a rate cut, meaning three-quarters believe Powell will continue to hold firm. But by March, the tone suddenly changes—the probability of a 25 basis point cut jumps to 40.4%. Although still less than half, it's already quite significant.
What really gives people goosebumps is this: 7.6% of institutions are betting on a violent 50 basis point rate cut in March.
Don't underestimate this 7.6%. In financial markets, such "extreme tail probabilities" often indicate that someone has sensed risks others haven't noticed. Keep in mind, those betting on such low-probability events are usually well-informed big players with keen instincts. What are they guarding against? A sudden collapse in economic data? Unexpected cooling of inflation? Or some black swan we haven't yet seen?
Over the next three months, every CPI report and non-farm payroll release could cause this 7.6% to rapidly expand. The market right now is like a tightly stretched bow, ready to snap at any moment.
Bond traders are already adjusting their positions, and gold has been showing some signs of movement in the past couple of days. Every point the dollar index jumps, it's a fierce battle between bulls and bears behind the scenes.
For the crypto market, this kind of macro expectation swings is the real source of risk. The recent volatility in BTC and ETH is largely following the Fed's rhythm. If something unexpected happens in March—whether it's a hawkish surprise or a sudden dovish shift—the market will have to reprice.
So here's the question: Do you think the Fed will continue to hold firm, driven by inflation data, or will recession signals scare them into easing earlier?