
THE FEDERAL BEIGE BOOK: A STEADY ECONOMY WITH GROWING FRACTURES
The latest Federal Reserve Beige Book offers a cautious but telling snapshot of the U.S. economy. While activity across most districts was described as “little changed” in recent weeks, the tone underneath the headline is notably more fragile. Consumer spending — particularly among middle- and lower-income households — continued to soften, and only the high-end retail segment showed resilience.
Employment conditions, once the strongest pillar of the recovery, are now showing early signs of cooling. Businesses reported slower hiring, softer wage pressures, and a reliance on natural attrition rather than active layoffs — a subtle yet meaningful shift. Inflation, meanwhile, remains in a pattern of moderate but persistent increases, with rising input costs still filtering through to prices.
The Beige Book also highlighted a unique complication: due to the government shutdown that lasted through November 12, federal economic data collection was temporarily disrupted. As a result, policymakers will head into the December FOMC meeting without complete labor market and inflation datasets for October and November, elevating the importance of real-world business feedback like this report.Although the overall tone stayed neutral, many businesses hinted at slower momentum on the horizon. Manufacturers were slightly more optimistic than retailers, yet the broader economic outlook was described as stable but at risk of softening — a sentiment that aligns increasingly with growing expectations of a policy shift.
J.P. MORGAN REVERSES COURSE ON RATE CUT TIMING
Notably, the Beige Book wasn’t the only signal reshaping market expectations. This week, J.P. Morgan economists reversed their stance on Federal Reserve policy timing, now forecasting a rate cut in December — a dramatic shift from just one week earlier, when they expected the first move to come in January.
The pivot came after a series of dovish comments from key Federal Reserve officials, especially New York Fed President John Williams, whose remarks suggested that cutting rates “in the near term” would not conflict with the Fed’s inflation goals. That change in tone proved enough for chief economist Michael Feroli and his team to adjust their forecast.
According to the bank, the most likely path is now a 25-basis-point cut in December, followed by another in early January, though they emphasized that uncertainty remains elevated going into the next FOMC decision.
The shift underscores how quickly sentiment among policymakers — and institutions interpreting them — is evolving. Only days earlier, stronger-than-expected September labor data had pushed forecasts toward a delayed policy response. However, the momentum has now swung back toward earlier easing as economic softness accumulates and inflation pressures continue to cool.
BITCOIN’S REACTION: A TEST OF SENTIMENT AND LIQUIDITY
Against this policy backdrop, Bitcoin has once again become a real-time sentiment gauge. Over the past several days, BTC has seen renewed volatility, initially pulling back alongside broader risk assets before gradually recovering as expectations of a December rate cut gained traction.
Historically, Bitcoin has responded favorably to falling interest-rate expectations, as lower borrowing costs and a softer dollar tend to support flows into higher-beta assets. This time, however, the reaction has been more measured. The price action suggests traders are watching the evolving macro narrative closely — but also waiting for confirmation rather than reacting purely to speculation.
Part of the hesitation may reflect the lack of complete economic data due to the government shutdown. With the Fed itself missing pieces of the inflation and labor picture, markets appear cautious about fully pricing in a policy pivot until more clarity emerges.
Still, the trend is notable: each time the probability of a December cut strengthened, Bitcoin found support — reinforcing its role as a barometer for liquidity expectations.
WHAT TO WATCH NEXT
As markets digest the Beige Book narrative and J.P. Morgan’s revised forecast, attention now turns fully to the upcoming Federal Reserve interest-rate decision in mid-December. With no complete inflation or employment datasets available before then, Fed communication in the coming days will play an outsized role in steering expectations.
If policymakers continue signaling openness to easing — and if financial conditions tighten further — the case for a December rate cut may solidify. However, should new data or statements suggest lingering concern about inflation stickiness, the Fed could still opt to wait until January.


















