Featured Image

Favorable Economic Outlook for 2026 Touted as Fed Cuts Rates

Dec 10, 2025

McLean, Va. (December 10, 2025) — After ploughing through an extended drought of official statistics because of the government shutdown, the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by a quarter point for the third consecutive meeting, landing at a target range of 3.5% to 3.75%. In announcing the policy change, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell relayed that their outlook for inflation and unemployment has remained largely unchanged since the October meeting. In what has become an easily anticipated vote since his appointment, Stephen Miran dissented in favor of a larger cut. This time, his dissent was joined by two additional members who favored no change to the policy rate.

Members of the Federal Open Market Committee also compiled their quarterly summary of economic projections for this meeting. Forecasts for 2026 show a strong uptick in expected GDP growth, with the forecast rising to 2.3% compared to the 1.8% forecast in September. Inflation is expected to stay above the 2% target for the next few years, and the unemployment rate is expected to begin a slow downward trend after peaking at 4.5% in 2025.

“Another voice in the chorus predicting an economic uptick in 2026 is a welcome refrain. Machinery orders have already begun to accelerate as we entered the last quarter of 2025 and continued growth as those machines hit shop floors should be a comforting signal for the cutting tool outlook in 2026,” said Christopher Chidzik, principal economist of AMT – The Association For Manufacturing Technology. “Powell made sure to emphasize in the meeting that the quarter-point cut was not a foray into accommodative territory but simply a move toward the neutral rate. Yet the mounting number of dissents each meeting shows that the path forward is anything but certain as the Fed navigates into 2026 with growing tension between the two sides of their dual mandate.”

Stay tuned to the latest USMTO reports to learn what industries are investing in additional capital equipment, and be sure to attend AMT’s Winter Economic Forum on Jan. 30 to get the latest outlook for the manufacturing landscape in 2026.

PicturePicture
Author
Kristin Bartschi
Director, Marketing & Communications
Recent intelligence News
AMT’s Winter Economic Forum explored the current state of manufacturing, where order values hit record highs but the numbers of units per order have not. Read the recap, learn the prospects ahead, and discover the business opportunities with industrial AI.
The first estimate of gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of 2025 showed the U.S. economy growing at a 1.4% real annualized rate, driven by declines in government spending and exports, coupled with a deceleration of consumer spending.
With real-world use cases and tangible investments driving demand, AI is now practical, profitable, and reshaping the manufacturing landscape. At AMT's 2026 Winter Economic Forum, manufacturers explored the business opportunities this technology presents.
Industrial production increased 0.7% and capacity utilization increased by 0.5% across the U.S. economy from December 2025 to January 2026, according to the latest report issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
This article will showcase how AMT research services can provide members with concise, relevant, and timely industry updates when the next MTForecast conference is months away.
Similar News
undefined
Intelligence
By Christopher Chidzik | Feb 23, 2026

Shipments of cutting tools totaled $215 million in December 2025, according to USCTI and AMT, an increase of 4.3% from November 2025 and 17.1% from December 2024. For full-year 2025, shipments totaled $2.56 billion, up 2.5% from 2024.

4 min
undefined
Intelligence
By Kristin Bartschi | Feb 20, 2026

The first estimate of gross domestic product for the fourth quarter of 2025 showed the U.S. economy growing at a 1.4% real annualized rate, driven by declines in government spending and exports, coupled with a deceleration of consumer spending.

3 min
undefined
Intelligence
By Christopher Chidzik | Feb 09, 2026

New orders of metalworking machinery hit a record level in December 2025, reaching $814.3 million, 86.7% over November 2025 and 59.9% over December 2024. The value of orders placed in 2025 totaled $5.74 billion, 22.5% above orders placed in 2024.

5 min