Fed Rate Cut Sparks Internal Division as Quiet QE Resurfaces

What the December 10, 2025 FOMC Decision Really Means for the Economy

The Federal Reserve wrapped up its meeting today with a 0.25% interest rate cut, bringing the federal funds target range down to 3.50%–3.75% — its third consecutive cut after similar moves in September and October.

On the surface, this looks like a simple easing step to support a slowing labor market.
But once you dig in, the picture becomes far more complicated — and far more concerning.

A Rarely Divided Fed

The vote was anything but unified: 9–3, one of the most divided decisions in years.

Who Dissented and Why

  • Jeffrey Schmid and Austan Goolsbee opposed the cut, warning that inflation remains too high to justify more easing.
  • Stephen Miran dissented in the opposite direction, voting for a larger 0.50% cut, arguing the labor market is weakening faster than expected.

A split like this signals profound uncertainty inside the Fed — uncertainty about inflation, recession risks, and the impact of fiscal policy chaos shaking the broader economy.

A “Hawkish Cut”: The Fed Is Nervous

The Fed changed key language in its statement, saying it will:

“carefully assess incoming data, the evolving outlook, and the balance of risks.”

That’s Fed-speak for:
“We cut today… but don’t count on many more.”

This aligns with their September projections (the “dot plot”), which suggested only one rate cut for 2026.

In short: The Fed is easing reluctantly — because the economy is weakening — but inflation remains uncomfortably high.

Why the Cuts Are Happening at All

The labor market is softening.
Private-sector hiring is slowing.
Small businesses are contracting.
And the combination of:

  • tariff-driven inflation,
  • fiscal instability,
  • falling real wages, and
  • productivity volatility

has forced the Fed into a defensive position.

The Quiet Bombshell: Shadow QE Returns

While most headlines will fixate on the rate cut, the real story today wasn’t the 25-basis-point adjustment at all — it was the Federal Reserve quietly confirming that it will begin purchasing $40 billion in short-term U.S. Treasuries every month, starting December 12, 2025.

They are not calling this quantitative easing, but functionally…
it is QE.

Why Fed Treasury Purchases = “Printing Money”

When the Fed buys Treasuries, it creates new bank reserves — increasing the money supply.
This process:

  • pushes Treasury yields down artificially,
  • lowers borrowing costs,
  • injects liquidity into financial markets, and
  • helps stabilize short-term funding conditions.

But there’s a cost.

The Long-Term Problem

Artificially cheapening government borrowing:

  • encourages larger deficits,
  • increases long-term national debt costs,
  • raises future inflation risk, and
  • can distort markets by disconnecting asset prices from economic fundamentals.

Put simply:
QE is a sugar high. Markets love it, but taxpayers pay for it later.

The Bottom Line

The Fed’s actions today reveal a deeply stressed economic landscape:

  • They cut rates because the economy is weakening.
  • They added stealth QE because fiscal dysfunction is destabilizing Treasury markets.
  • They signaled caution because inflation is still too high.

A healthy economy doesn’t require three rate cuts, divided votes, and quiet bond-buying programs.

This is not stabilization — it’s triage.

Trumpenomics

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