Daily market snapshot

Published December 10, 2025
 Woman on couch looking at laptop

Wednesday, 12/10/2025 p.m.

  • Markets rally to new record highs after Fed meeting – Equity markets delivered strong gains this afternoon after the Fed cut interest rates, as widely expected, and provided less hawkish signals than the market had seemingly feared around the path for future policy*. The S&P 500 index was up 0.8%, but the biggest gains were seen in small-cap equity markets, with the interest-rate-sensitive Russell 2000 index up close to 2% over the day*. Canadian equities also delivered strong gains, with the S&P/TSX index up 0.8%, even though the Bank of Canada opted to leave interest rates unchanged – as widely expected – arguing that current settings are appropriate*. We also saw a rally in government bond markets after the meeting, bringing the yield on the 10-year U.S. and Canadian bonds between 3-4 basis points (0.03% to 0.04%) lower*. Against this backdrop the U.S. dollar struggled, falling close to 0.5% against a trade-weighted basket of international currencies*. Conversely, lower interest rates helped push gold prices nearly 1% higher over the day*.  
     
  • Bank of Canada happy to sit on its hands – At first glance there looks to be relatively few surprises from the Bank of Canada meeting this morning*. Rates were, as widely expected, held unchanged at 2.25%, and in terms of forward guidance, the bank is signaling that current monetary-policy settings look appropriate should the economy evolve as the central bank expects*. There was some acknowledgement that recent data have been a shade better than expected, with Governor Macklem flagging the resilience of activity seen in recent labour-market reports and in third-quarter GDP data*. Moreover, the Bank will be upgrading its growth expectations for coming years based on the recently passed budget that contains a range of measures aimed at boosting Canadian investment rates*. However, amid ongoing trade-policy risks, and with slack still evident in the Canadian economy, the overall message is that the moderately supportive policy setting currently in place remains appropriate given the outlook*. We think the Bank of Canada will hold interest rates steady in 2026.
     
  • A divided Fed – As anticipated, the Fed's decision to cut rates today was contested, with two FOMC members (Schmid and Goolsbee) voting in favor of unchanged interest rates, while Miran continued to make the case for even deeper rate cuts*. This is the first time we have seen three dissents against an FOMC decision since 2019, underlining the divisions on the Fed's rate-setting committee around the path for policy*. Subtle changes to the language of the Fed's press statement that accompanied the decision today hinted that the central bank is preparing to take a pause from easing at its January meeting, following three consecutive interest-rate cuts*. Chair Jerome Powell seemed to amplify the signal that the central bank would be on hold, in the short term at least, at his press conference, but hinted that the Fed was likely to ease further by arguing it was unlikely the central bank's next step would be an interest-rate hike*. We think the Fed will cut just once or twice more next year, leaving interest rates in the 3%-3.5% range.
     

James McCann;
Investment Strategy

Source: *Bloomberg

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