[BlockBeats] The latest Federal Reserve Beige Book has just been released, dated January 15. Data shows that since mid-November last year, economic activity in most U.S. regions has been rebounding, with growth accelerating from “slight” to “moderate.” This improvement is the most noticeable in recent cycles.
But there’s a problem— the labor market hasn’t kept pace. Out of 12 regions, 8 directly reported that employment levels have hardly changed, and wage growth has even retreated back to the “normal, moderate” range. In other words, the labor market is cooling down, although not yet out of control, but the trend is clear.
The more critical aspect is inflation. Previously, companies absorbed costs to sustain themselves for a while, but as inventories before the implementation of tariffs are gradually depleted, this approach is no longer viable. Now, companies are starting to directly pass tariff-related expenses onto end prices. Regions like New York and Minneapolis have confirmed this—price increases are already significantly squeezing corporate profits, with healthcare and insurance costs rising the fastest.
This change aligns perfectly with recent statements from Federal Reserve officials. Their message is: the economy hasn’t entered recession, employment remains resilient, but the path for inflation to decline is uneven. Under the disturbance of tariffs and policy uncertainties, an early rate cut is basically unlikely. The most realistic expectation is that the Fed will probably wait until around mid-year before taking further action.
The core logic is quite simple: the signals from the Beige Book are not “the economy is strengthening,” but “inflationary pressures are shifting later.” When these costs are finally reflected in PPI and CPI data, the Fed’s room for maneuver will be further compressed. This is also why global markets’ expectations for easing policies have been continuously revised— the environment has changed, and expectations naturally need to adjust accordingly.
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SatsStacking
· 01-17 22:57
Interest rate cut postponed? That's funny, it just means inflation isn't dead yet, and companies are starting to shift the blame onto consumers.
With cold employment and falling wages, Powell really needs to hold this time... feels like BTC is about to suffer a setback.
Tariffs are just prolonging inflation; the Beige Book is still pretending not to see it.
It's all about inventory digestion and price hikes, the cycle continues. Bitcoin is the real hedge.
When will this rate cut happen? Next year? I bet five sats.
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StakeTillRetire
· 01-17 21:35
Interest rate cut postponed? That's laughable. Employment is cooling down, companies will still blame consumers. I'm tired of this routine.
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LayerZeroHero
· 01-17 18:37
Economic activity is rebounding, but the job market is struggling—this pretty much sums up the current United States.
Tariffs are directly passed through to consumers, and wallets are shrinking again.
Interest rate cuts are nowhere in sight; Bitcoin should be taking off now.
Companies can't absorb the rising costs, so they can only pass the buck to consumers, typical.
In short, the data looks good but the underlying economy is weak, and the Federal Reserve dares not act.
Wait, isn't this a sign of stagflation? Holding cash and observing.
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AirdropSkeptic
· 01-15 03:42
The economy is improving but employment is frozen? How does that logic add up... With tariffs being cut, consumers will have to be cut again, right?
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NFTFreezer
· 01-15 03:42
Economic activity is rebounding but employment remains sluggish, this doesn't seem right, are companies hoarding resources?
The wave of tariffs is really coming, retail prices are soaring, and wallets are about to shrink again.
Interest rate cuts are unlikely, the Federal Reserve still has to endure, can BTC stay stable?
Companies no longer have room to absorb costs, now it's all about how inflation will unfold.
This is probably the prelude to stagflation, the rate hike cycle isn't over yet.
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ETHmaxi_NoFilter
· 01-15 03:42
Economic activity rebounds, but employment lags behind—this is a joke... As soon as tariffs are implemented, companies start raising prices—who can withstand this?
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GateUser-44a00d6c
· 01-15 03:17
Economic activity is rebounding, but employment is lagging behind. This trick has been played out; now companies are directly blaming inflation on consumers...
Federal Reserve Beige Book signals new developments: inflation delayed, rate cuts postponed become a certainty
[BlockBeats] The latest Federal Reserve Beige Book has just been released, dated January 15. Data shows that since mid-November last year, economic activity in most U.S. regions has been rebounding, with growth accelerating from “slight” to “moderate.” This improvement is the most noticeable in recent cycles.
But there’s a problem— the labor market hasn’t kept pace. Out of 12 regions, 8 directly reported that employment levels have hardly changed, and wage growth has even retreated back to the “normal, moderate” range. In other words, the labor market is cooling down, although not yet out of control, but the trend is clear.
The more critical aspect is inflation. Previously, companies absorbed costs to sustain themselves for a while, but as inventories before the implementation of tariffs are gradually depleted, this approach is no longer viable. Now, companies are starting to directly pass tariff-related expenses onto end prices. Regions like New York and Minneapolis have confirmed this—price increases are already significantly squeezing corporate profits, with healthcare and insurance costs rising the fastest.
This change aligns perfectly with recent statements from Federal Reserve officials. Their message is: the economy hasn’t entered recession, employment remains resilient, but the path for inflation to decline is uneven. Under the disturbance of tariffs and policy uncertainties, an early rate cut is basically unlikely. The most realistic expectation is that the Fed will probably wait until around mid-year before taking further action.
The core logic is quite simple: the signals from the Beige Book are not “the economy is strengthening,” but “inflationary pressures are shifting later.” When these costs are finally reflected in PPI and CPI data, the Fed’s room for maneuver will be further compressed. This is also why global markets’ expectations for easing policies have been continuously revised— the environment has changed, and expectations naturally need to adjust accordingly.