Here's a lesson in how markets work: sometimes it's not about what just happened, but what might happen next. Wednesday delivered a perfect example when stocks rallied hard even as Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell essentially closed the door on rate cuts in January.
The iShares Russell 2000 ETF (IWM), which tracks the Russell 2000 small-cap index, surged 1.7% to fresh all-time highs. The Dow Jones Industrial Average jumped 558 points, or 1.2%, closing at 48,120. The S&P 500 rose 0.8% and the Nasdaq 100 added 0.6%, both inching closer to their own record territory.
So what was everyone celebrating? The Fed's third consecutive rate cut, sure—but more importantly, its upgraded economic outlook. While Powell made it pretty clear that the first meeting of 2026 would be a "wait and see" moment, investors latched onto the December projections showing stronger growth, softer inflation, and a path forward that looks decidedly more optimistic than September's forecasts.
Powell Pumps The Brakes
The Federal Open Market Committee cut the federal funds rate by 25 basis points to 3.50-3.75%, pointing to cooling labor conditions and moderating inflation as justification. But Powell's message was clear: we're done for now.
"We're within a broad range of estimates of neutral," Powell said, adding that the Fed is "well positioned to wait and see how the economy evolves." Translation: don't expect another cut at the January meeting.
President Donald Trump, never one to stay quiet on Fed policy, chimed in to say the rate cut should have been at least twice as large. Powell didn't take the bait.
Internal Divisions Show Cracks
While 9 of 12 officials voted to cut, the meeting exposed some serious disagreements. Powell acknowledged the FOMC is wrestling with "tension between our employment and inflation goals." Inflation remains stubbornly above the 2% target, but rising jobless claims and weak hiring data have created growing concerns about the labor market.
When pressed on whether the Fed's next move could actually be a rate hike, Powell shot down the idea: "I don't see that as anybody's base case." Instead, he said policymakers are split between holding rates steady or potentially cutting again later in 2026.
With his term as Fed Chair ending in May, Powell was asked about his legacy. His answer was straightforward: hand off an economy in "really good shape," with inflation at 2% and a strong labor market. "All of my efforts are to get to that place," he said.
The Good News That Actually Mattered
Despite Powell's hawkish tone on January, equity markets powered higher because traders zeroed in on the Fed's rosier forecasts. Real GDP is now expected to grow 2.3% in 2026, up substantially from the 1.8% projected earlier. Core inflation is forecast to fall to 2.5% next year and hit the 2% target by 2028.
Powell credited stronger business investment—particularly in artificial intelligence infrastructure and data centers—along with resilient consumer spending for the improved outlook. "The baseline expectation for next year is a pickup in growth," he said, highlighting both fiscal support and AI-related capital expenditures as tailwinds.
Rate-Sensitive Sectors Go Wild
The sectors most sensitive to interest rate movements had a field day. Regional banks, homebuilders, and clean energy stocks all rallied sharply:
- The SPDR S&P Regional Banking ETF (KRE) surged 3.7%, its strongest session since August.
- Triumph Financial Inc. (TFIN) rose 6.2%.
- Kearny Financial Corp. (KRNY) gained 6%.
- Clean energy names saw heavy buying, with the Invesco Solar ETF (TAN) up 3.5%.
- Homebuilders rallied hard, pushing the iShares Home Construction ETF (ITB) up 3.2%.
- Dream Finders Homes Inc. (DFH) jumped 8.5%.
- Installed Building Products Inc. (IBP) climbed 7.1%.
The takeaway? Markets are forward-looking creatures. Yes, Powell said January is probably off the table for cuts. But the Fed's upgraded growth forecast and lower inflation projections painted a picture of an economy that's heating up without overheating—a Goldilocks scenario that has investors thinking maybe, just maybe, we can have nice things after all.