Let’s talk about the data the Fed watches most closely—the Core PCE Price Index. Every time this thing gets released, it basically triggers a “policy expectations reshuffle” in the market.
So what happens if the data comes in hot (for example, the previous and expected values are both at 2.9%, but the actual result is even higher)? The market immediately starts thinking: Rate cuts? Probably have to wait a bit longer, and high interest rates might stick around for a while. The dollar will strengthen, US Treasury yields will jump, and the stock market—especially growth stocks like those in tech—will likely take a hit.
On the flip side, if the data comes in below expectations, or just matches them? The mood is totally different. The market breathes a sigh of relief—inflation pressure is easing, a “soft landing” looks possible, and expectations for rate cuts might even move forward. At times like this, risk assets get a boost—stocks go up, crypto rallies, and the dollar weakens.
So watching PCE is basically betting on what the Fed’s next move will be.
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Web3ExplorerLin
· 12-05 11:44
hypothesis: PCE is basically the oracle network of macro policy—whoever controls the data feed controls market sentiment. fascinating how it mirrors byzantine generals problem, except here fed's the only general that matters lol
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CryptoSurvivor
· 12-05 11:31
That's why I need to have a cup of coffee to calm my nerves every time before the PCE comes out.
Let’s talk about the data the Fed watches most closely—the Core PCE Price Index. Every time this thing gets released, it basically triggers a “policy expectations reshuffle” in the market.
So what happens if the data comes in hot (for example, the previous and expected values are both at 2.9%, but the actual result is even higher)?
The market immediately starts thinking: Rate cuts? Probably have to wait a bit longer, and high interest rates might stick around for a while. The dollar will strengthen, US Treasury yields will jump, and the stock market—especially growth stocks like those in tech—will likely take a hit.
On the flip side, if the data comes in below expectations, or just matches them?
The mood is totally different. The market breathes a sigh of relief—inflation pressure is easing, a “soft landing” looks possible, and expectations for rate cuts might even move forward. At times like this, risk assets get a boost—stocks go up, crypto rallies, and the dollar weakens.
So watching PCE is basically betting on what the Fed’s next move will be.