After a strategic pause through much of 2025, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) has resumed rate cuts, lowering its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points on September 17 — the first reduction since December 2024. While tariffs have complicated the inflation and growth outlook, the Fed has signaled that preserving growth remains its top priority. Although most developed market central banks are also in easing mode, albeit at varying speeds, the Fed’s return to rate cuts injects fresh momentum into the global rate-cutting cycle.
Historically, equities tend to rally in the months following the initial Fed cut during periods of economic stability, and they did so after last year’s rate cuts. However, tariffs disrupted the rate-cutting cycle, triggering heightened volatility across risk assets. Preserving growth has become the near-term priority for central banks, even as inflation risks linger. For investors, the key question is how much the macroeconomic backdrop has shifted since rate cuts resumed, as the context surrounding monetary easing remains critical for risk assets.
In hindsight, central banks were relatively aligned in their objectives for some time, hiking rates post-COVID to curb elevated inflationary pressures and then easing as price pressures subsided. With an uncertain outlook for growth and inflation and as central banks face challenges in maintaining policy equilibrium, global policy could increasingly diverge, potentially leading to disparate outcomes for risk assets across different markets.