The market is entering that usually turbulent airspace where the Fed once again dominates the instrument panel. For months, traders have been glancing at labour data like a pilot eyeing the altimeter, wondering if the steady drop was giving way to stall speed. Now, with job revisions peeling away nearly a million payrolls and unemployment creeping higher, the stall horn has begun to chirp. Powell and his crew can’t ignore the warning. The throttle is coming down — the only question is whether it’s the start of consecutive insurance adjustment or the Fed thinks we are moving into emergency times.
Futures markets have already plotted the flight path: a 90% chance of a quarter-point trim, with only a slim 10% probability of a sharper 50. The history lesson is clear — most cuts, 60% since 1990, have been 25 bp, while nearly every 50 has come in the teeth of recession. That’s why a half-point slash here would be the equivalent of declaring an engine flameout. The convexity sits in the tails: if labour weakness accelerates, the front end will rip higher, with Z5 and H6 ( Front end options), the gauges every trader has pinned to the dash.
The labour market is the drag forcing the Fed’s hand. Goldman Sachs' Global Investment Research ( GIR) composite measure of tightness — unemployment, job openings, quits, and surveys — has broken down, now sitting below its pre-pandemic level.
Even with all the noise from survey response rates and immigration shifts, the thrust has faded. The Fed can’t be caught behind the curve; trimming rates now is less about stoking growth and more about stabilizing lift before stall speed turns into a nosedive.
Inflation, meanwhile, looks more like crosswinds than a head-on storm. Tariff pass-through could push core PCE to 3.2% into year-end, but that’s a squall the Fed can fly through. Housing is normalizing, supply is abundant, and wage-sensitive services are losing altitude as labour cools. Last Thursday’s CPI was static on the radio, not a reason to divert course. Markets have already looked through it, betting Powell continues to ease regardless.
That’s why this first stage of the cutting cycle is the “easy part.” A series of 25 bp trims brings policy closer to neutral without rattling the cabin. Futures are already baking in around 73 bp of easing by December — three standard cuts that fit neatly into the narrative. But the convexity is there: a sharper labour deterioration could flip the script, with traders repricing quickly for a 50 bp emergency move.
Beyond 2025, the skies get choppier. As the policy rate approaches 3%, each additional cut gets harder to justify without recessionary conditions. On one side, markets will continue to price a dovish premium under Trump — a new Fed chair unlikely to raise rates, a fiscal stance leaning expansionary, and political cover for easier policy. On the other hand, inflation risks remain. Push cuts too far, and second-order price effects could return just as growth begins to re-accelerate.
And that re-acceleration is not hypothetical. GIR’s base case has tariffs fading, fiscal impulse turning positive, and productivity — turbocharged by AI investment — lifting potential GDP above 2.25%. Financial conditions are already loose, easing another 75 bp since June, with equities doing most of the work. The market is still pricing positive growth outcomes alongside an increasingly dovish Fed. Unless labour truly rolls over, 2026 could see the economy climbing again even as Powell’s foot remains on the easing pedal.
For traders, that paradox is the real destination. Cuts now are justified, quarter-point trims are the base case, but the convex ( and short dollar) trade is in the front end if labour cracks faster. Beyond that, the bigger question is whether 2026 forces the market to start building inflation premia back into the curve. With a dovish Fed, a fiscal tailwind, and AI-driven productivity acting like a fresh thrust, real assets should remain well bid. The landing this year may look smooth, but the longer flight path promises plenty of turbulence.
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