US Fed Cuts Rates: What That Means for Global Investors
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The U.S. Federal Reserve has lowered rates by 25 bps and signalled that more easing could follow into late 2025. Markets read it as a shift toward supporting a softening labour market while keeping an eye on inflation. Equity markets cheered, and gold extended a multi-week rally as yields moved around the guidance.
So, what does a Fed rate cut actually mean for portfolios, and how should we think about diversification today?
What the cut usually implies (and what it doesn’t)
Historically, the first cut isn’t a magic switch. Stocks often do fine over the 12 months after easing begins, but the path can be choppy; especially if the cut arrives because growth is slowing. In other words, rate moves tend to reflect the economy more than they drive it. Several long-lookback studies show equities have, on average, posted positive 12-month returns after initial cuts, but near-term drawdowns aren’t unusual.
Bonds typically benefit as yields drift lower during cutting cycles, boosting total returns from price appreciation, though the income on cash-like holdings tends to fall as policy rates decline.
Why diversification matters even more in easing cycles
Cuts are being framed as “risk management,” not an all-clear. The Fed flagged labour-market fragility while acknowledging inflation risks haven’t vanished. That mix, easing policy amid mixed data, can create dispersion across regions, sectors, and asset classes. Diversifying globally is a way to stay exposed to areas that may benefit differently from lower U.S. rates (think currency moves, export sensitivity, or regional policy paths).
- Equities: Multiple expansion (higher P/Es) can help, particularly in rate-sensitive or growth segments, but outcomes hinge on earnings resilience.
- Bonds: Over the duration of the bond’s life, investors can easily understand the expected return as the yield to maturity, except if there are any bankruptcies or lack of payback, which usually is the case in high-yield markets around recessionary periods. When investing in High-Quality bonds however, history has shown that they benefit from lower interest rates as investors seeking safety and locking in higher yield flock into this asset class.
- Real assets/commodities: Lower real yields often support gold and other stores of value; recent price action reflects that dynamic.
Context from the Fed and market reaction
The message from Washington: easing, but measured. Powell emphasised a meeting-by-meeting approach, with the market pricing in the possibility of further cuts later this year if the labour backdrop weakens. That’s supportive of risk assets in principle, yet not the same as a “whatever-it-takes” stimulus. Expect data-dependent swings.
Practical framing (educational, not advice)
- Think globally: Economic cycles don’t move in lockstep. A U.S. cut can be bullish for some non-U.S. markets via currency and liquidity channels, while other regions set their own pace (e.g., the ECB recently held as it upgraded growth). A globally diversified mix helps capture different pockets of strength.
- Balance growth and resilience: Equities may benefit from easier policy, but if cuts arrive alongside slower growth, quality balance sheets and diversified sector exposure can help navigate dispersion. Historical studies suggest the direction of earnings matters as much as the level of rates.
Reassess the role of cash and bonds: As policy rates drift lower, the relative appeal of staying too heavy in cash typically falls compared with core bonds (or sukuk) that can gain from declining yields.
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