Dow soars over 550 points, S&P 500 hits new record after Fed rate cut

US stocks surged after the Federal Reserve delivered its third straight quarter-point rate cut on Wednesday, with the Dow Jones jumping over 550 points and the S&P 500 notching another record close.

The Fed’s decision to lower rates to a range of 3.5%-3.75% sparked a relief rally even as Chair Jerome Powell signaled a more cautious approach to future cuts.

The market’s enthusiasm reflected investor hunger for monetary easing, though Powell’s measured tone suggested investors may be pricing in more Fed support than the central bank intends to deliver.

US stocks rally as Fed eases

The Dow climbed approximately 550 points, or 1.2%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.8% to break through its October peak, notching a new record close.

The Nasdaq Composite, heavily weighted toward rate-sensitive technology stocks, added 0.4% as investor appetite for risk rebounded. ​

The two-year Treasury yield, most sensitive to near-term Fed policy expectations, fell approximately 3-5 basis points, reflecting traders’ relief that rate cuts remained on the table.

The Fed’s announcement to resume Treasury bill purchases, the first time since 2020, sent a more dovish signal than the headline rate cut alone.

Financial stocks, typically pressured by lower rates, posted gains anyway, suggesting investors believed the easing cycle would support economic growth rather than signal recession fears.

Notably, the Fed’s vote carried a 9-3 split, with three dissents, two wanting to hold rates steady and one preferring a 50 basis point cut.

This division underscored internal disagreement about whether to support the labor market or guard against rekindled inflation.

Yet markets largely brushed aside the friction, choosing to focus on the path of least resistance.​

Limited easing in the future

Powell walked a tightrope during his press conference.

He acknowledged that “downside risks to employment rose in recent months,” justifying the cut, but pointedly stated, “I don’t think that a rate hike is anybody’s base case at this point.”

The Fed’s latest dot-plot projections showed only one additional cut penciled in for 2026, a striking shift from market pricing that currently reflects roughly 68% odds of two or more cuts next year.

Markets had entered Wednesday expecting Powell to lay groundwork for multiple 2026 cuts, viewing the Fed as embarking on sustained easing.

Instead, Powell’s language suggested the Fed is hitting pause after three cuts.

The committee also stressed it would closely monitor inflation and labor market dynamics before committing to further moves.

Powell added that upcoming employment reports and inflation readings would shape the Fed’s calculus, leaving the door ajar but not inviting traders inside.

Investors interpreted Wednesday’s rally as validation of their “rate-cut optimism,” but Powell’s guidance offered caution.

The Fed has signaled it will move deliberately from here, watching data before committing to additional cuts.

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