Powell Pivot Clears Path for Rate Cuts

Chair Powell’s speech at Jackson Hole was a proper and long overdue pivot—and the markets immediately rejoiced. This was the dovish signal investors had been hoping for, and even stronger than I expected Powell to deliver. The Fed’s newfound willingness to “look through” tariff-induced inflation marks a major shift in policy tone, and I believe we are now firmly on a path toward easing, barring any major surprises. That’s excellent news for equities, housing, and rate-sensitive sectors.

It’s remarkable how openly Powell downplayed tariff inflation. After months of ambiguity, he finally acknowledged that these price increases are one-time tax and exogenous—just as I’ve argued for months. This matters because if the Fed is no longer chasing inflation driven by non-monetary forces, the focus naturally shifts to the labor market. And here, the evidence is mounting that the momentum is fading.

Goldman Sachs pegs underlying monthly payroll growth at just 33,000 jobs—a level so low that even a mild statistical wobble could deliver a negative print. If that occurs in the August jobs report, I wouldn’t be surprised to see a 50-basis point cut in September. Otherwise, I expect the Fed to move methodically: 25 basis points at each meeting through year-end, targeting a fed funds rate near 3% by early next year.

Markets have rightly priced in this trajectory. While the 10-Year Treasury yield fell modestly on Powell’s remarks, it’s the mortgage market where the implications are potentially most powerful. With prepayment risks high and spreads wide, 30-year mortgage rates could drop by 100 basis points even without major movement in long yields. That explains the sharp rally in homebuilders. Adjustable-rate borrowers stand to benefit directly from the short end of the curve falling, and that feeds directly into the strength of small-cap stocks, many of which are highly sensitive to short-term borrowing costs.

Make no mistake, these rate cuts matter. Some question whether shaving 75 or 100 basis points makes a real difference. It does—$20 trillion in loans are directly pegged to the fed funds rate through SOFR, LIBOR, and prime-linked products. That includes everything from credit cards to small business loans, and it’s why the Russell 2000 outperformed strongly. Big tech might not need to borrow, but mom-and-pop America sure does.