U.S. November Inflation Data Just Released — Core PCE Year-over-Year Growth Rate at 2.8%, Fully In Line with Expectations. Sounds good, but don’t get too excited just yet; this data has a bit of a “stale” feel. During the government shutdown, economic data reports were delayed, and this set of numbers actually reflects the situation from a few months ago, so it should be taken with a grain of salt.
Looking at the current situation, it’s quite interesting — although inflation remains somewhat sticky, consumer spending is not backing down at all. People are still spending, with steady growth in expenditures, and economic resilience is evident. Because of this, the Federal Reserve is not in a hurry. Next week’s policy meeting? Most likely, they’ll just keep observing; rate cuts are still far off. The gold market has already digested all of this, with little fluctuation, indicating that everyone is confident.
What truly determines the future direction will depend on what new data comes out in the next few months. The most critical thing now is this observation period. 📊
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New_Ser_Ngmi
· 17h ago
The point about data lag is spot on; it has no reference value at all.
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ChainChef
· 17h ago
nah this pcе read like last season's leftovers... fed's gonna keep simmering, not rushing the rate cut recipe anytime soon. consumer spending still got that appetite tho, interesting marination happening here. watching the data kitchen closely over next few months tbh, that's where the real alpha gets cooked up
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GateUser-75ee51e7
· 17h ago
Data is aging, the Federal Reserve continues to observe, and a short-term rate cut is unlikely. Consumption is still supporting the economy, which remains resilient. For the crypto market, it means the oscillation mode continues.
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MetamaskMechanic
· 17h ago
The saying that data is outdated is hilarious, but now the key still depends on whether the consumer side buys into this approach. People still spend money—what does that say...
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ProbablyNothing
· 17h ago
The data is outdated, but people are still spending money. It feels like the Federal Reserve is just sitting back and enjoying the show.
U.S. November Inflation Data Just Released — Core PCE Year-over-Year Growth Rate at 2.8%, Fully In Line with Expectations. Sounds good, but don’t get too excited just yet; this data has a bit of a “stale” feel. During the government shutdown, economic data reports were delayed, and this set of numbers actually reflects the situation from a few months ago, so it should be taken with a grain of salt.
Looking at the current situation, it’s quite interesting — although inflation remains somewhat sticky, consumer spending is not backing down at all. People are still spending, with steady growth in expenditures, and economic resilience is evident. Because of this, the Federal Reserve is not in a hurry. Next week’s policy meeting? Most likely, they’ll just keep observing; rate cuts are still far off. The gold market has already digested all of this, with little fluctuation, indicating that everyone is confident.
What truly determines the future direction will depend on what new data comes out in the next few months. The most critical thing now is this observation period. 📊