Powell Tempers Pivot Hopes, Says December Cut Not Assured as Nasdaq Advances and Dow Slips

Written byAdam Shapiro
Wednesday, Oct 29, 2025 4:05 pm ET1min read
Aime RobotAime Summary

- U.S. stocks mixed as Fed cuts rates to 3.75%-4.00%, ending balance-sheet runoff by Dec 1 amid "moderate" growth and elevated inflation.

- Nasdaq rose 0.6% but dipped after Powell warned December rate cuts are "not a forgone conclusion," while Dow fell 0.2%.

- Trump-Xi truce talks in South Korea aim to pause tariff wars with potential rollbacks on fentanyl duties and TikTok U.S. sale approval.

- Microsoft Azure global outage disrupted services, with partial recovery by 19:22 UTC and full restoration expected by 23:20 UTC.

U.S. stocks were mixed late Wednesday: the Nasdaq rose about 0.6% (≈+131) to ~23,959, the S&P 500 hovered flat near ~6,891, and the Dow dipped 0.2% (≈-74) to ~47,633, while the Russell 2000 fell 0.84% to 246.86. In commodities, Dec crude changed hands around $60.29 (+0.23%) and Dec gold slid to $3,950.80 (-0.81%).

The Fed

by a quarter point to 3.75%–4.00% and said it will conclude balance-sheet runoff on December 1, a move designed to preserve liquidity while policy remains restrictive. Market reaction was mixed, with the S&P and DOW turning negative at the start of Chair Jerome . The tech-heavy Nasdaq also dropped when Chair Powell said, "A further reduction in the policy rate at the December meeting is not a forgone conclusion. Far from it." The FOMC statement described growth as “moderate,” acknowledged slower job gains and a slightly higher—though still low—jobless rate, and said inflation “remains somewhat elevated,” maintaining a data-dependent posture. The Committee that “downside risks to employment” have risen recently.

Away from monetary policy, geopolitics returned to the tape. Bloomberg and Politico reported that Donald Trump and Xi Jinping

on Thursday in South Korea to finalize a cooling of tensions that could pause recent tariff rhetoric. Early indications point to targeted tariff rollbacks, potential relief on fentanyl-linked duties, and approval of a sale of TikTok’s U.S. operations, alongside easing on soybean purchases and rare-earth licensing—a package framed as a pragmatic truce rather than a comprehensive settlement.

Microsoft’s Azure experienced

tied to Azure Front Door beginning at 16:00 UTC, with the company deploying a “last known good” configuration and reporting signs of recovery by 19:22 UTC. Some portal extensions remain intermittent, and customer configuration changes are temporarily blocked while mitigation proceeds; full recovery is anticipated by 23:20 UTC. “Microsoft 365 services are experiencing downstream impact related to the ongoing Azure outage,” the company said on X. The status update suggested customers consider failover via Azure Traffic Manager as a stopgap, and referenced Microsoft Learn materials outlining globally resilient web-app patterns.

With Fed policy aligned mainly to expectations but potentially holding a December rate cut, and Big Tech results pending, traders appear content to mark time. QT concluded that the policy mix, gentle easing, focuses on whether earnings momentum in hyperscale and AI can extend the year-end rally without re-stoking inflation concerns.

author avatar
Adam Shapiro

Adam Shapiro is a three-time Emmy Award–winning content creator, former network news correspondent, and founder of the multimedia production company TALKENOMICS. At AInvest, he created and launched Capital & Power, a video podcast series designed to drive engagement and establish thought leadership, while also producing original live streams, financial articles, and investor-focused video content. Previously, as a correspondent at FOX Business, Shapiro established the network’s Washington, D.C. bureau, reported from the White House, Capitol Hill, and the Federal Reserve, and secured exclusive bipartisan interviews with influential leaders. His reporting helped solidify FOX Business as the most-watched business channel on television. At the same time, his original Talkenomics series drew tens of thousands of viewers per episode through insightful conversations with policymakers, economists, and thought leaders. At Yahoo Finance, he played a critical leadership role in expanding digital programming to eight hours of live, bell-to-bell financial news coverage, dramatically increasing traffic from 68M to 104M unique monthly visitors and growing ad revenue from zero to over $50 million annually. Yahoo Finance continues to benefit from the credibility of Shapiro’s exclusive interviews with former President Donald Trump and numerous Fortune 500 CEOs.

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