Sometimes the market gets exactly what it wants to hear. Fresh U.S. economic data dropped this week with the kind of Goldilocks energy that gets ETF traders excited: inflation cooling just enough, sentiment rebounding sharply, and suddenly a December rate cut looks less like wishful thinking and more like a done deal.
The combination of softer core inflation and better-than-expected consumer confidence is already shifting where ETF money wants to flow. And with the Federal Reserve's decision landing next week, investors are repositioning around themes that benefit most when borrowing costs come down.
Where the Money Might Move
Lower interest rates hit different parts of the market differently. Large-cap growth stocks—the kind that get valued on distant future earnings—tend to love falling discount rates. That makes ETFs like Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) and Vanguard Growth ETF (VUG) particularly interesting if the Fed signals a friendlier policy path ahead. Both funds edged higher Friday as traders digested the data.
But the real action might be happening further down the market cap ladder. Small companies have been getting hammered by high refinancing costs, and a policy shift could completely change that dynamic. Growth-focused small-cap ETFs like iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO) and Vanguard Russell 2000 Growth ETF (VTWG) suddenly look far more attractive if borrowing gets cheaper. Throw in the fact that younger consumers just posted a 13% jump in expected personal finances—a demographic that tends to support smaller, faster-growing companies—and you've got an interesting setup brewing. It's not a full rotation yet, but small-cap growth is creeping back onto radar screens.
Consumer-related ETFs are also in focus. A rate cut would give borrowers more breathing room, which should help discretionary spending. That's good news for funds like State Street Consumer Discretionary Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLY) and Vanguard Consumer Discretionary Index Fund ETF (VCR). Meanwhile, defensive plays like State Street Consumer Staples Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLP) may lose some of their recent appeal as investors trade safety for growth.
All of this is happening with the S&P 500—tracked by Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO)—sitting just 0.2 percentage points below record highs. If the Fed delivers next week, ETF markets might be first in line to pop champagne.
What the Data Actually Says
The numbers backing this optimism are worth unpacking. The CME FedWatch tool now puts the odds of a quarter-point cut at 87.2%, which means traders are basically betting it's happening.
The delayed September Personal Income and Outlays report showed headline PCE inflation rising 2.8% year over year—exactly what economists expected and the highest reading since August 2024. More importantly, core PCE, which the Fed watches most closely, eased from 2.9% to 2.8%. Monthly core prices climbed just 0.2%, while consumer spending rose 0.3%, with energy and utilities driving most of the gains.
Then came the University of Michigan sentiment data for early December, which added fuel to the optimistic fire. Consumer sentiment climbed from 51.0 to 53.3, powered by that impressive 13% surge in younger Americans' expected personal finances. Even better for the inflation story: one-year inflation expectations dropped to 4.1%, the lowest level since January.
Put it all together and you get a narrative that's hard to ignore—inflation trending the right direction, consumers feeling better about the future, and a Fed that might finally have room to ease. Whether that translates into sustained ETF momentum depends on what Powell and company actually deliver next week, but the setup is certainly there.