Fed Cuts Rates: What It Means
October 29, 2025

The Federal Reserve announced today that it is cutting interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point, bringing the federal funds target range down to 3.75% to 4.00%. While it may sound like just another number, this decision carries real implications for the economy and financial markets.
Now, however, concerns about the job market are moving to the forefront. Hiring has slowed, and the Fed has acknowledged that risks to employment are rising. With economic data disrupted by the government shutdown, the central bank is working with incomplete information. In that uncertainty, officials chose to act in what they call a “risk management” mode, providing a bit of cushion for the economy.
Borrowing and Spending
Business Investment
Markets and Volatility
Why the Fed Made This Move
The Fed has two primary goals: keep inflation under control and support a healthy job market. Over the last year, much of the focus has been on the first goal. Inflation has been stubborn, running higher than the Fed’s 2% target.
Now, however, concerns about the job market are moving to the forefront. Hiring has slowed, and the Fed has acknowledged that risks to employment are rising. With economic data disrupted by the government shutdown, the central bank is working with incomplete information. In that uncertainty, officials chose to act in what they call a “risk management” mode, providing a bit of cushion for the economy.
What This Means for the Economy
Borrowing and Spending
Lower rates typically filter into lower borrowing costs for businesses and households. That can mean slightly cheaper loans, credit cards, and mortgages. We have already seen mortgage rates dip in anticipation of this move, and that could provide some relief for homebuyers.
Business Investment
When financing is less expensive, businesses are more likely to expand, invest, and hire. The Fed hopes this cut provides enough encouragement to keep the labor market steady. The reality, however, is that a single quarter-point cut may only have a modest impact unless overall demand in the economy improves.
Inflation Still in the Picture
The challenge is that inflation has not gone away. By easing policy while prices are still running above target, the Fed runs the risk of letting inflation flare up again. That balancing act—supporting jobs without reigniting inflation—will be the key tension in the months ahead.
Housing and Consumers
The housing sector is especially sensitive to changes in interest rates. Builders and buyers often respond quickly when financing costs move even a little lower. At the same time, for households carrying debt, lower rates can make it easier to manage payments or refinance. But if wages stagnate or unemployment rises, those benefits may be limited.
Markets and Volatility
Markets had largely anticipated this cut, so the bigger story is what happens next. Investors are already debating whether this will be the first of several cuts, or just a one-off adjustment. That uncertainty often creates volatility in both stocks and bonds.
The Bigger Picture
The Fed has made it clear that there is no preset course. Officials will continue to watch the data and adjust policy as needed. That means future moves could go in either direction depending on whether inflation proves sticky or the job market weakens further.
What does this mean in practical terms? It means we are entering a period where the Fed may be more reactive than proactive. Each new employment report, inflation reading, or sign of economic strength or weakness will take on outsized importance.
Our Perspective
For clients, the most important takeaway is that the Fed is signaling greater concern about the labor market, even as inflation remains above target. In other words, the economy is at a delicate point. The rate cut should provide some near-term relief, but it is not a magic fix.
We are watching several key areas closely:
- The pace of hiring and unemployment trends
- Inflation data to see if price pressures start to ease or flare back up
- Housing activity, which could pick up if mortgage rates continue to drift lower
The Fed’s move today is best seen as a stabilizing step. It shows policymakers are willing to provide support if needed, but it also highlights just how uncertain the path forward is.
Periods like this can create noise in the markets, but they also underscore the value of staying focused on long-term goals. Our role is to keep a steady eye on developments, evaluate the implications, and make thoughtful decisions on your behalf.
As always, we will continue monitoring the Fed’s actions and the broader economy, and we will keep you updated as the situation evolves.

Markets continue to navigate a mix of encouraging economic news and ongoing global uncertainty. While investors remain optimistic about the long-term outlook for the economy and corporate earnings, headlines from around the world continue to influence day-to-day trading. One of the biggest factors remains geopolitics. Although tensions in the Middle East have eased somewhat, investors are still watching developments closely because they can affect oil prices, inflation, and ultimately interest rates. Lower oil prices this week have helped calm some inflation concerns, which has been a positive for the broader market. Technology also remains in the spotlight. Strong earnings and continued investment in artificial intelligence have supported parts of the market, although investors are becoming more selective as valuations in some technology companies remain elevated. Looking ahead, markets will continue to focus on inflation data and the Federal Reserve's next steps. If inflation continues to moderate, it could provide support for stocks. However, unexpected developments overseas, changes in energy prices, or shifts in economic data could still create short-term volatility. While short-term market movements can be unsettling, they are a normal part of investing. Rather than reacting to daily headlines, we remain focused on building portfolios designed to weather changing market conditions and help you pursue your long-term financial objectives. Maintaining a disciplined, diversified investment strategy remains one of the most effective ways to navigate uncertainty. As always, if your financial situation or goals have changed, we're here to help ensure your plan continues to align with what matters most to you.

As we turn the page to June, markets find themselves at a familiar crossroads: optimism tempered by uncertainty, momentum tested by macro headwinds. May closed on a constructive note, with equities finishing the month at or near all-time highs — a remarkable recovery from the turbulence that defined the early part of the year. The dominant theme of 2026 has been resilience in the face of disruption. From the tariff volatility of the first quarter to geopolitical shocks in the Middle East, investors have repeatedly demonstrated a willingness to look through near-term noise toward the fundamentals. That posture has been rewarded. The S&P 500 has returned over 10% year-to-date, driven in large part by an exceptional earnings season — first-quarter blended growth came in above 28%, the strongest pace in several years — and continued enthusiasm around artificial intelligence investment. Yet the risk landscape heading into summer is far from benign. The conflict in the Middle East remains the single most important variable in the macro calculus. Energy markets have been severely disrupted, with Brent crude up sharply on the year despite recent relief as hopes for a resolution in the Strait of Hormuz gained traction. Oil prices are not merely an energy story — they are a consumer story, an inflation story, and ultimately an interest rate story. A durable peace agreement could be a meaningful tailwind; a breakdown in talks, the opposite. The bond market deserves particular attention. One of the defining features of this cycle has been the breakdown of the traditional stock-bond diversification relationship. Since the onset of the Middle East conflict, long-duration Treasuries have failed to provide the ballast they historically offered during periods of equity stress. Sticky inflation, persistent fiscal deficits, and energy-driven price pressures have conspired to keep yields elevated. Investors relying on a classic 60/40 framework may find that the playbook requires updating looking into high quality corporates. On the monetary policy front, the transition at the Federal Reserve — from Chair Powell to Kevin Warsh — has so far been absorbed calmly, with equity and bond volatility both declining in recent sessions. The Fed's path remains data-dependent, and this week's jobs report will be closely watched. Consensus expects the unemployment rate to hold near 4.3%, consistent with a "low hire, low fire" labor market. More interesting may be the wage data: softening wage growth could constrain consumer spending at a moment when the personal savings rate is already under pressure. Globally, the picture is more nuanced than a simple risk-on or risk-off framing suggests. European equities outperformed in May, while the ECB is now actively signaling the possibility of rate hikes in June — a stark contrast to the easing cycle many had anticipated a year ago. Emerging markets have staged a meaningful recovery, supported by AI infrastructure spending and a softer U.S. dollar. The macro divergences between regions are as wide as they have been in years, and that creates both risk and opportunity depending on how portfolios are positioned. Seasonality is worth noting as well. June has historically been a challenging month for equities in midterm election years, and after a sharp rally off the March lows, some degree of consolidation would not be surprising. Markets rarely move in straight lines, and the conditions for short-term choppiness — elevated geopolitical risk, a pivotal central bank meeting in Europe, key economic data releases, and a VIX that has returned to complacency — are present. The bottom line: the fundamental backdrop remains broadly supportive, earnings momentum is intact, and long-term investors have been well-served by staying disciplined. But the risks are real and the range of outcomes is wide. In an environment where traditional hedges are less reliable and geopolitics can move markets overnight, diversification, quality, and a clear-eyed view of one's own time horizon matter more than ever. As always, we are here to discuss how these dynamics relate to your specific situation. Please do not hesitate to reach out.

The first four months of 2026 have been a useful reminder that markets do not move in straight lines. After entering the year at record highs, U.S. equities pulled back sharply on geopolitical tensions tied to the Iran conflict, with the S&P 500 coming close to a ten percent decline before recovering much of that ground. Volatility has returned again on rising energy prices and a softer tone from the technology sector that has carried so much of this cycle’s leadership. Oil sits near one hundred dollars per barrel, the ten-year Treasury yield hovers near four and a half percent, and traditional diversification between stocks and bonds has been less reliable than many investors have come to expect. None of this changes our long-term view. It does sharpen a conversation we believe every household within ten years of retirement, on either side of that line, should be having right now. THE QUESTION THAT MATTERS MOST After more than thirty years of advising families through every kind of market, I have come to believe that one question matters more than almost any other in retirement planning. It is not what your average return will be. It is not even how much you have saved. The question is this: in what order will those returns arrive, and what will the portfolio be doing when they do? Two households can finish their working years with identical balances and identical long-term average returns. One can run out of money. One can remain wealthy for life. The only difference between them is the order in which good and bad years happened to fall. WHY ORDER MATTERS MORE THAN AVERAGE When a portfolio is accumulating, a market drop is something close to a gift. Contributions buy more shares at lower prices. When a portfolio is distributing, the same drop is a wound. Every dollar withdrawn during a downturn cannot participate in the recovery, and the base from which all future growth compounds is permanently smaller. Retirees who began withdrawals in 1973, in 2000, or in 2008 lived through outcomes quite different from those who retired even two or three years earlier or later. Same averages over the long arc. Very different lives for the family. THE RETIREMENT RED ZONE Retirement planning does not begin the year you stop working. It begins five to ten years before. We sometimes call that window the retirement red zone, and it is the period in which the wrong portfolio, held too long, can do real and lasting damage. A portfolio that served someone beautifully through their fifties is rarely the right portfolio for the first decade of withdrawals. Waiting until the retirement date itself to reposition is not a plan. It is a hope. HOW WE REPOSITION PORTFOLIOS Repositioning is a multi-year process, not a single trade. We model honest cash-flow needs in dollars. We construct one to three years of withdrawals in stable, liquid reserves so no client is ever forced to sell equities into a falling market. We build an intermediate layer of high-quality bonds to refill those reserves over time. We sequence withdrawals across taxable, traditional, and Roth accounts to manage lifetime tax cost, often using the years before Social Security and required minimum distributions for thoughtful Roth conversions. We rightsized concentrated and legacy positions over multiple tax years. And we stress test the plan against a meaningful market drop in year one before any client crosses the retirement line. A CLOSING THOUGHT Sequence risk is not really a math problem. It is a human one. The discipline to reposition during good markets, when it can feel almost unnecessary, is what separates retirees who sleep well from those who reach for the wrong decision at the worst possible moment. By the time a dramatic market drop arrives, the work either has been done or it has not. Whether you are a long-time client of Affinity Capital or considering a relationship with our firm, we would welcome a conversation about how your portfolio is positioned for the years ahead.

