FOMC Statement, Updated Forecast, and Powell Press Conference

December 10, 2025

In the six weeks since the late October review of U.S. monetary policy, the dollar on balance moved hardly at all against the euro but rose 2.7% against the Japanese yen as can be seen at the bottom of the table below. The 10-year Treasury yield is now 15 basis points higher than then, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq indices are almost 2% lower. The prices of Bitcoin and WTI oil have dropped 17% and 4%, while gold has risen a little more than 5%.

EUR/$ $/JPY 10Y, % DJIA Oil, $
06/30/04 1.2173 109.44 4.63 10396 37.95
06/30/05 1.2090 110.89 3.96 10370 57.00
06/29/06 1.2527 116.07 5.20 11077 73.41
06/28/07 1.3452 123.17 5.10 13456 69.82
08/07/07 1.3749 118.55 4.73 13510 72.27
09/18/07 1.3888 115.75 4.51 13475 81.42
10/31/07 1.4458 115.28 4.42 13873 93.59
12/11/07 1.4682 111.49 4.11 13645 89.78
01/30/08 1.4792 107.31 3.70 12454 91.70
03/18/08 1.5786 98.73 3.41 12257 107.53
04/30/08 1.5562 104.58 3.83 12953 111.54
06/25/08 1.5568 108.37 4.18 11837 133.62
08/05/08 1.5445 108.42 3.97 11484 119.82
09/16/08 1.4144 105.16 3.36 10936 91.18
10/08/08 1.3625 99.87 3.50 9447 87.02
10/29/08 1.2933 97.15 3.81 9145 67.38
12/16/08 1.3790 90.14 2.52 8687 44.14
01/28/09 1.3253 90.01 2.61 8356 42.92
03/18/09 1.3115 98.13 2.94 7340 47.73
04/29/09 1.3331 97.06 3.02 8194 51.05
06/24/09 1.3984 95.43 3.59 8373 68.76
08/12/09 1.4221 96.17 3.71 9366 70.64
09/23/09 1.4779 91.50 3.50 9859 69.13
11/04/09 1.4884 90.75 3.51 9896 80.66
12/16/09 1.4542 89.78 3.56 10478 73.14
01/27/10 1.4045 89.49 3.61 10148 73.31
03/16/10 1.3756 90.64 3.67 10645 81.45
04/28/10 1.3157 94.10 3.75 11043 82.57
06/23/10 1.2284 90.12 3.13 10307 76.50
08/10/10 1.3107 85.85 2.81 10605 79.94
09/21/10 1.3132 85.21 2.66 10747 73.05
11/03/10 1.4059 81.35 2.53 11174 84.59
12/14/10 1.3423 83.37 3.38 11497 88.47
01/26/11 1.3658 82.55 3.41 12001 87.36
03/15/11 1.3969 81.04 3.29 11815 98.09
04/27/11 1.4665 82.63 3.36 12612 112.48
06/22/11 1.4392 80.12 2.97 12175 94.87
08/09/11 1.4234 77.09 2.36 10993 81.76
09/21/11 1.3778 76.34 1.93 11377 86.74
11/02/11 1.3724 78.11 2.03 11805 92.77
12/13/11 1.3067 77.92 1.98 12130 100.20
01/25/12 1.3027 77.96 1.97 12670 98.85
03/13/12 1.3096 82.76 2.08 13044 106.34
04/25/12 1.3226 81.37 1.97 13096 104.13
06/20/12 1.2693 79.28 1.66 12837 83.63
08/01/12 1.2300 78.10 1.49 13028 88.98
09/13/12 1.2895 77.43 1.72 13342 97.60
10/24/12 1.2948 79.75 1.77 13115 85.72
12/12/12 1.3082 83.24 1.70 13325 87.13
01/30/13 1.3584 91.16 2.02 13949 97.63
03/20/13 1.2948 95.65 1.94 14497 92.82
05/01/13 1.3195 97.48 1.62 14740 90.47
06/19/13 1.3364 95.76 2.23 15304 98.38
07/31/13 1.3301 97.92 2.67 15565 105.63
09/18/13 1.3363 98.28 2.76 15606 107.01
10/30/13 1.3764 98.18 2.48 15660 97.42
12/18/13 1.3696 103.81 2.89 16198 98.06
01/29/14 1.3651 102.13 2.73 15719 97.23
03/19/14 1.3918 101.75 2.71 16335 99.96
04/30/14 1.3868 102.11 2.66 16553 99.52
06/18/14 1.3584 101.93 2.61 16892 106.12
07/30/14 1.3372 102.84 2.51 16878 101.45
08/17/14 1.2961 107.60 2.57 17151 94.05
10/29/14 1.2677 108.40 2.33 16956 82.51
12/17/14 1.2409 117.58 2.11 17201 57.85
01/28/15 1.1337 117.77 1.78 17457 44.75
03/18/15 1.0637 120.98 2.05 17733 42.49
04/29/15 1.1164 118.67 2.05 18039 59.16
06/17/15 1.1255 124.22 2.39 17862 59.12
07/29/15 1.1073 123.61 2.29 17720 49.17
09/17/15

10/28/15

1.1334

1.1081

120.86

120.50

2.26

2.07

16778

17687

47.01

45.83

12/16/15

01/27/16

03/16/16

04/27/16

06/14/16

07/27/16

09/21/16

11/02/16

12/14/16

02/01/17

03/15/17

05/03/17

06/14/17

07/25/17

09/20/17

11/01/17

12/13/17

01/31/18

03/21/18

05/02/18

06/13/18

08/01/18

09/26/18

11/08/18

12/19/18

01/30/19

03/20/19

05/01/19

06/19/19

07/31/19

09/18/19

10/30/19

12/11/19

01/29/20

03/03/20

03/15/20

03/23/20

04/29/20

06/10/20

07/29/20

09/16/20

11/05/20

12/16/20

01/27/21

03/17/21

04/28/21

06/16/21

07/28/21

09/22/21

11/03/21

12/15/21

01/26/22

03/16/22

05/04/22

06/15/22

07/27/22

09/21/22

11/02/22

12/14/22

02/01/23

03/22/23

05/03/23

06/14/23

07/26/23

09/20/23

11/01/23

12/13/23

01/31/24

03/20/24

05/01/24

06/12/24

07/31/24

09/18/24

11/07/24

12/18/24

01/29/25

03/19/25

05/07/25

06/18/25

07/30/25

09/17/25

10/29/25

12/10/25

1.0956

1.0874

1.1089

1.1339

1.1205

1.0998

1.1160

1.1099

1.0641

1.0741

1.0638

1.0910

1.1149

1.1735

1.2010

1.1631

1.1815

1.2424

1.2271

1.1963

1.1788

1.1668

1.1765

1.1400

1.1420

1.1415

1.1355

1.1244

1.1217

1.1132

1.1066

1.1117

1.1112

1.1002

1.1179

1.1087

1.0697

1.0859

1.1367

1.1787

1.1824

1.1814

1.2174

1.2115

1.1908

1.2071

1.2126

1.1812

1.1722

1.1581

1.1255

1.1287

1.0983

1.0536

1.0438

1.0129

0.9884

0.9884

1.o686

1.0988

1.0792

1.1047

1.0860

1.1065

1.0672

1.0563

1.0875

1.0840

1.0855

1.0681

1.0830

1.0814

1.1126

1.0801

1.0487

1.0423

1.0864

1.1356

1.1515

1.1473

1.1864

1.1650

1.1658

 

121.72

118.48

113.70

111.37

106.15

105.65

100.84

103.33

115.37

113.52

114.48

112.47

111.55

111.17

111.34

113.91

112.58

109.31

106.27

109.91

110.38

111.69

112.94

113.88

112.26

109.55

111.42

111.17

108.36

108.59

108.16

108.89

108.62

109.14

107.21

108.33

111.26

106.73

107.24

104.84

105.00

103.68

103.65

104.07

109.27

108.80

109.97

110.09

109.23

114.01

113.98

114.36

118.62

130.10

133.82

137.31

144.08

146.93

134.86

128.93

132.57

135.22

139.38

140.82

148.06

150.87

142.93

146.58

151.60

157.68

155.93

150.89

141.97

152.94

153.77

155.05

145.92

143.03

144.64

148.89

154.63

152.24

156.40

2.29

2.02

1.99

1.89

1.62

1.53

1.70

1.78

2.45

2.49

2.57

2.30

2.13

2.29

2.24

2.35

2.34

2.73

2.89

2.97

2.96

2.99

3.08

3.23

2.81

2.72

2.57

2.48

2.08

2.02

1.75

1.80

1.80

1.61

1.01

1.01

0.81

0.61

0.77

0.59

0.67

0.77

0.91

1.01

1.66

1.62

1.49

1.25

1.31

1.56

1.45

1.78

2.19

2.98

3.34

2.77

3.56

4.03

3.51

3.41

3.54

3.37

3.79

3.89

4.35

4.79

4.02

3.97

4.28

4.66

4.27

4.11

3.68

4.34

4.36

4.55

4.32

4.26

4.35

4.35

4.04

4.01

4.16

17583

16002

17217

18013

17675

18461

18151

17989

19915

19890

20885

20920

21375

21711

22376

23405

24585

26259

24839

24095

25309

25310

26543

26195

23881

24841

25727

26624

26452

27210

27048

27067

27877

28833

25917

23185

18592

24667

27169

26467

28196

28418

30,125

30,554

32,868

33,908

34,251

34,938

34,279

35,894

35,493

34,594

33,726

33,242

30,806

31,846

30,850

32,524

34,175

34,093

32,466

33,689

34,108

35,418

34,553

33,226

37,090

38,380

39,144

37,888

38,772

40,995

41,634

43,703

43,606

44,789

41,660

41,665

42,454

44,474

45,463

47,838

47,742

35.95

30.85

37.79

44.89

48.29

41.91

43.44

45.18

51.83

53.33

48.43

47.96

44.71

48.75

50.55

54.24

56.60

64.41

65.00

67.57

66.77

67.62

71.68

60.93

47.80

54.51

59.48

63.38

53.65

58.48

58.16

54.60

58.68

53.52

47.18

31.73

23.36

15.30

39.05

41.22

40.00

38.84

47.77

52.81

64.30

63.70

72.32

74.25

71.94

81.14

70.39

87.40

95.70

107.71

116.24

97.36

83.70

88.57

77.56

76.80

70.32

68.70

69.38

78.93

90.28

82.86

69.77

75.92

81.70

80.52

78.79

77.74

70.65

72.76

71.00

72.75

67.38

58.24

73.82

70.40

64.50

60.56

58.22

The FOMC statement, issued at 14:00 EDT, showed that little has changed in the FOMC member views since the prior meeting when widely divergent interpretations of the economy were expressed. Like then, the federal funds rate was cut by 25 basis points. A 9-1-2 vote elicited opposite dissents from Governor Miran, who favored cutting by 50 bps, and Kansas City Federal Reserve District President Schmid, who was joined by Chicago Fed District President Goolsbee in wishing to leave the federal funds rate target unchanged. The new target range becomes 3.50-3.75%, down from the peak of 5.25-5.50% that prevailed prior to the initial cut of 50 basis points done in September 2024.

The text of today’s statement is extremely similar to the previous one. No substantive changes were made to the initial paragraph that deals with economic trends. Growth is moderately paced. Employment expansion has slowed, and the jobless rate has edged higher. Inflation remains somewhat elevated and is above levels earlier this year.

The dot-plot graph of individuals’ separate views on appropriate levels of the fed funds target continues to show a very wide dispersion due primarily to differences over what constitutes a neutral interest rate level. There is a 125-basis point spread between the highest indication of 3.875% and the lowest of 2.625%, and the opinions shown by all the other dots are pretty evenly spread out without any obvious consensus. Forecasts of future inflation and unemployment have changed little. GDP growth is higher than predicted in the previous quarterly forecast update released in September.

In the two hours from around a half hour before the FOMC statement and the end of Chairman Powell’s press conference, investors responded by driving major U.S. stock indices up 0.4-0.7%, edging the 10-year treasury yield down two basis points, and with a dollar dip of about 0.25% against both the yen and euro. Those modest changes reflect a lack of shock surprises and the characterization  of the U.S. economic prospects as being somewhat better than thought a couple of months ago. GDP growth in 2026 and 2027 will be a bit stronger than imagined back in September. Unemployment is not expected to rise much further. Inflation is coming from mostly tariffs, and when asked about when the tariff effect on general inflation is likely to end, Powell said in the absence of new tariffs that could occur just a few months from now. The mix of low hiring but resilient GDP growth stems from resilient consumer spending (albeit skewed toward the upper end of income earners) and AI-driven business investment. It’s been a long time since labor productivity has expanded around 2% per annum over so many years.

From a monetary policy standpoint, the basic messages to the public are, number one, that the federal funds rate has now fallen toward the upper end of what’s generally considered a neutral policy. Number two, FOMC member views diverge more over the size of risks represented by low job growth and above-target inflation than over how they perceive the economy and believe how trends will evolve. Number three, the choice to act gradually predominates because of the uncertainty of these times, the absence of a huge gap currently between where inflation and employment are and their ideal levels, and the preference for a neutral stance and perception of the policy stance after cuts of three 25-basis points made since September has drawn into much closer alignment. When asked about the possibility of a rate hike, Powell said that scenario has not as yet entered the realm of the Fed’s baseline scenario.

Copyright 2025, Larry Greenberg. All rights reserved. 

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