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Fed Forced to Abort QT: Bank of America & JPMorgan See Early Pivot Next Week

Fed Forced to Abort QT: Bank of America & JPMorgan See Early Pivot Next Week

Published:
2025-10-23 20:40:45
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Bank of America and JPMorgan now expect the Fed to end quantitative tightening next week, earlier than planned

The tightening experiment hits a wall—Wall Street giants confirm the Fed's retreat.

The Great Liquidity Reversal

Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase now project the Federal Reserve will terminate quantitative tightening at next week's meeting—months ahead of schedule. The sudden consensus shift signals deepening concerns about financial stability as the central bank's balance sheet reduction approaches dangerous territory.

Emergency Protocol Activated

Market liquidity indicators flashed warning signals throughout October, forcing institutional reassessments. The accelerated timeline suggests underlying stress the Fed can no longer ignore—even as officials maintain public confidence in the original plan.

Wall Street's Whisper Network

Major banks now position for the policy U-turn, with trading desks adjusting exposure ahead of the formal announcement. The early QT termination represents the latest central bank capitulation to market reality—proving once again that Wall Street's addiction to cheap money remains the ultimate too-big-to-fail institution.

Powell says reserves are nearly at ‘ample’ level

Fed Chair Jerome Powell didn’t leave much doubt earlier this month. He said the balance sheet runoff WOULD stop when reserves are “somewhat above” the level considered ample, meaning just high enough to prevent a market crash.

“We may approach that point in coming months,” Powell said in his speech. That was all traders needed to hear. Wall Street’s now reading that as code for “we’re close.”

Still, the Fed’s tools aren’t just limited to the balance sheet. Some traders expect a policy rate cut next week, potentially bringing the federal funds rate down to 3.75%–4%. But without good data, any MOVE now comes with blind spots.

And that’s where the second problem hits: the government shutdown is cutting off the Fed’s access to economic data.

Since early October, official reports on things like unemployment, retail sales, and other critical indicators have gone dark. The shutdown stopped government data collection in its tracks, leaving the Fed flying blind just days before a key policy meeting.

To make it worse, the labor market was already softening. August showed the slowest hiring pace since 2010, and unemployment was rising fast among young people and minorities. The central bank can’t properly judge whether the slowdown is temporary or systemic.

Fed hunts for alternatives as data blackout continues

With the government’s economic engine stalled, the Fed is turning to whatever’s still running. New York Fed President John Williams said in an interview on October 9 that “we’re still getting a significant amount of data,” pointing to surveys from the Conference Board, the New York Fed, and the Institute for Supply Management. These surveys help track pricing, demand, and business activity—but they’re nowhere NEAR as complete as what agencies like the Commerce Department and Bureau of Labor Statistics normally deliver.

And this time, the situation is even more fragile. ADP, a key payroll software firm, ended its data-sharing deal with the Fed back in August, cutting off another private source of jobs data. That leaves policymakers with even fewer tools than they had during the last shutdown in 2018–2019, when they leaned on card transactions and vehicle sales just to scrape together a picture of consumer behavior.

One exception is the Consumer Price Index for September, which will be released this Friday. The Bureau of Labor Statistics recalled staff just to ensure that release could go out, so Social Security’s annual cost-of-living adjustments have a basis. But that’s it. Most other reports remain frozen.

And economists widely agree on one thing: private-sector numbers just don’t cut it.

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