Markets Surge on Renewed Fed Rate Cut Expectations
U.S. equity futures climbed Monday as traders priced in an 87% probability of a September Federal Reserve rate cut following July’s weaker-than-expected jobs growth. The jobs report showing 140,000 new positions – below the 190,000 forecast – fueled bets that the central bank will ease monetary policy to support economic momentum. The S&P 500 hit fresh all-time highs last week, while the 10-year Treasury yield fell 15 basis points to 4.19%, its lowest since March.

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Financial Sector Leads Gains Amid Policy Shift
Bank stocks rallied 2.1% last week as lower borrowing costs promise to revive loan demand and ease balance sheet pressures. “The Fed’s potential pivot creates tailwinds for lenders,” noted a Morningstar analysis of financial sector performance. Meanwhile, tech stocks extended their 2025 dominance with a 4.3% quarterly earnings growth rate, outperforming the S&P 500’s 3.8% average.
Bubble Warning Lights Flash as Rally Accelerates
Société Générale strategists caution that Fed easing could overheat markets, with their “bear case” projecting a speculative surge toward 7,500 for the S&P 500 – 35% above current levels. “Aggressive cuts might mirror the 1999 dot-com mania when valuation metrics lost grounding,” warned the firm’s August report via Business Insider. The index currently trades at 21x forward earnings, exceeding its 10-year average of 17.6x.
Fed’s Tightrope Walk: Growth vs. Stability
While markets price in two 2025 rate cuts, recent FOMC meeting minutes suggest policymakers remain cautious about declaring victory over inflation. The coming weeks’ CPI data and Jackson Hole symposium could recalibrate expectations. Investors face a paradox: easing policy supports corporate earnings but risks reinflating asset bubbles.
- S&P 500 Valuation: 21x forward P/E vs. 17.6x decade average
- Interest Rate Probabilities: 87% chance of September cut per Fed funds futures
- Sector Movers: Financials +2.1%, Tech +4.3% last week
As markets navigate this dichotomy, focus shifts to earnings quality and economic resilience. While lower rates may fuel short-term gains, the Fed’s inflation battle and equity valuations suggest investors should prioritize fundamental analysis over momentum chasing.
