Unsubscribe

Confirm you would like to unsubscribe from this list

You have unsaved changes on the page. Would you like to save them?

Remove strategy

Confirm you would like to remove this strategy from your list
Give Us a Call

Fund Operations
800.847.0200

FIND ANOTHER CONTACT
Image of a metal mesh framework artistically warped into a honeycomb walkway in the city to describe Outlook 2023
Markets & Economy

FOMC Update: Rates Lowered for the First Time Since 2024

Christian Hoffmann, CFA
Head of Fixed Income and Managing Director
17 Sep 2025
2 min read

Christian Hoffmann shares his perspective on the Fed’s stance and the potential impact of monetary policy.

Details of the Fed Announcement

The FOMC cut rates 25 basis points, and its target range dropped to 4.00-4.25%, representing the first cut in 2025. The Fed signaled that two more cuts might be on the way before the end of the year at the two remaining meetings (October and December). The committee noted recent sluggishness in the labor market in its post-meeting statement. “Job gains have slowed, and the unemployment rate has edged up but remains low,” which also detailed that economic activity has “moderated” and inflation “has moved up and remains somewhat elevated.”

Christian’s Views

The FOMC cut rates by 25 basis points to 4.00-4.25%, which was our base-case expectation. The market grappled with some probability of a 50-basis point cut, which likely would have caused a more outsized market reaction. Bonds responded positively to start, likely driven by a dovish 50 basis points of additional cuts for 2025. All this comes against a macro backdrop with fairly hawkish and largely unchanged forecasts. Unsurprisingly, the Fed noted that the downside risks to employment have risen.

New board member, Stephen Miran, was just sworn in and dissented. Given his very public views and posturing, any other action would have been surprising. Dissents from Bowman and Waller were a toss-up in our view, and somewhat surprising that we didn’t get at least one additional dissent. I might chalk that up to legacy members pushing back against outside influence or a revised outlook from retail sales data. Additionally, I think markets have been too sanguine about the increasingly politicized and potentially less independent Fed. If dissents become the norm, we are moving away from the long precedent of a consensus-driven Fed to something maybe entirely different.  

We have to ask if this is a paradigm shift. Has the reaction function changed? Should we start to price in new members to the FOMC that align with Miran’s very different views?

Key Takeaways

The central bank’s dot plot, which shows individual members’ anonymous expectations, indicates a median estimate of 3.4% for the federal funds rate at the end of 2026. That compares to a median estimate of 3.6% for the end of this year. However, the Fed is projecting only one rate cut in 2026, which is less than expected, according to its median projection. A single quarter-point reduction next year is significantly more conservative than the current pricing of two to three cuts next year. The forecasts, however, showed a wide range of opinion, with two voting members seeing as many as four cuts and three officials expecting three rate reductions next year.

Fed Chair Powell commented in his press conference after the decision characterizing the move as a “risk-management cut,” insinuating the move was more of an insurance cut in case the economy dramatically slowed. “There are no risk-free paths now. It’s not incredibly obvious what to do,” Powell said.

.

Discover more about:

Stay Connected

Subscribe now to stay up-to-date with Thornburg’s news and insights.
Subscribe

More Insights

Real Estate

Real Estate Market Recap: Trends, Challenges, and What Comes Next

The U.S. real estate market is both vast and diverse, and it continues to evolve.
Investor Advice

Beyond the Hype—Building Smarter Private Credit Portfolios

Private credit’s growth to $2T brings new risks. Learn where to find better risk adjusted returns—and how to navigate cov-lite, redemption pressure, and mega fund concentration.
Markets & Economy

Structural Forces Are Driving the Current Investment Environment

The current investment environment is primarily being shaped by three structural forces—disruption, decoupling, and dislocation—amid a weakening US dollar.
Investment Tactics

Key Principles of the ETF Execution Protocol

Over many years, ETF capital market teams have talked about how to execute ETFs, but there is limited insight into the “Why?” We seek to clarify not only how to execute ETF trades but also the rationale behind best practices.
Economy

Finding Opportunity Amid Imbalance: 2026 Market Outlook

Entering 2026, markets appear imbalanced, with equity returns becoming increasingly concentrated, while fixed income offers asymmetric outcomes with limited downside protection. Opportunity still exists, just not where it’s most crowded. In 30 minutes, we cut through the noise and focus on what’s working, what’s changing, and where to position client portfolios now.
Press Release

Thornburg Income Builder Opportunities Trust Announces Distribution

Thornburg Income Builder Opportunities Trust (NASDAQ: TBLD) announced its monthly distribution.

Our insights. Your inbox.

Sign up to receive timely market commentary and perspectives from our financial experts delivered to your inbox weekly.