Understanding Fed Dissents: What Could a Divided Fed Mean?
On 10 December 2025, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) voted to reduce its benchmark interest rate by 25 basis points, bringing the target range for the federal funds rate to 3.5%-3.75%. However, the decision was not unanimous. In a 9-3 vote, three committee members formally dissented; an unusually fractured outcome that has occurred only a few times historically, with opposing views on both sides.
For traders in forex pairs such as EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and USD/JPY, as well as those trading government bonds and interest-rate-sensitive instruments, understanding what these divisions signal can help navigate the uncertain policy environment. The article describes Fed dissent procedures while explaining the dot plot interpretation and the 2026 FOMC members who will influence future interest rate decisions.

TL;DR
The FOMC members who voted in December 2025 disagreed with each other, which resulted in three dissenting votes that indicate possible future doubts.
One official (Governor Stephen Miran) preferred a larger 50bp cut; two (Fed Presidents Goolsbee and Schmid) wanted no cut.
The Fed's dot plot shows seven officials predict no rate cuts will occur in 2026, but the median projection indicates only one cut.
The return of "extent and timing" language, which has appeared throughout history, shows that the process of interest rate reduction has paused for a short period.
The FOMC voting members for 2026 will include two new members who support strict monetary policies: Logan from Dallas and Hammack from Cleveland, which could alter the committee's decision-making process.
What Are Fed Dissents, and Why Do They Matter?
The Mechanics of FOMC Voting
The FOMC consists of 12 voting members at any given time: the seven members of the Board of Governors, the President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, and four of the remaining eleven regional Reserve Bank presidents, who rotate on a basis. While all 19 participants contribute to discussions and economic projections, only the 12 designated voters cast formal votes on policy decisions. (Source: Federal Reserve)
When a voting member disagrees with the majority decision, they may cast a dissenting vote. The meeting statement and minutes contain public records of dissenting opinions, which help market participants understand different perspectives among committee members.
Hard Dissents vs. Soft Dissents
Hard Dissents occur when voting members formally oppose the majority decision. In December 2025, three hard dissents were recorded:
Governor Stephen Miran voted for a larger 50 basis point cut (dovish dissent)
Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid voted to hold rates steady (hawkish dissent)
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee voted to hold rates steady (hawkish dissent).
Soft Dissents are reflected in the projections of non-voting members whose forecasts imply disagreement with current policy. According to CNBC, four other non-voting participants registered soft dissents in December 2025, indicating they disagreed with the decision.
Why Do Dissent Types Matter for Market Participants?
The distinction between hawkish and dovish dissents becomes crucial because it indicates which risks affect positions that react to the interest rate.
The Hawkish dissents (preferring no cut or a rate hike) indicate that some officials believe monetary policy has become too relaxed, as this stance could support the U.S. dollar while creating pressure on bond markets.
Dovish dissents: While past performance does not guarantee future results, historically, in light of dovish dissents, the dollar has experienced weakness, while bond prices have risen, as dovish dissents, which support larger interest rate reductions, indicate that economists are concerned about economic performance.
Still, nothing is certain when it comes to the markets.
The December 2025 emergence of dissents between committee members suggests that members are uncertain about which policy direction to follow, which in turn could lead to increased market instability.
Reading the Dot Plot: What Seven "No Cut" Officials Signal
Understanding the Summary of Economic Projections
The Federal Reserve publishes the Summary of Economic Projections (SEP), which shows individual policymakers' federal funds rate predictions for future years through a "dot plot." The system displays participant opinions through dots, which help market participants understand both the average market perspective and the extent of market agreement.
December 2025 Dot Plot Takeaways
The December 2025 dot plot showed considerable disagreement among the 19 FOMC participants regarding 2026 projections:
Seven officials projected no cuts (hold at 3.5%-3.75%)
Four officials projected one 25bp cut
Four officials projected two 25bp cuts (50bp total)
One official projected more aggressive cuts (150bp, likely Governor Miran)
The median projection indicates that the Federal Reserve will make one more 25bp cut during 2026, which will establish a target interest rate between 3.25% and 3.5% for the end of 2026. The Federal Reserve maintained its interest rate target range of 3.25%-3.5% for 2026, according to the September 2025 SEP median projection.
What Does Wide Dispersion Mean?
Seven officials from the organization maintain their opposition to any relaxation of monetary policy during the upcoming year. The various possible results make it difficult for market participants to determine their subsequent actions.
Heightened uncertainty around the 2026 rate path
Potential for surprise if incoming data shifts the balance
Two-way risk for interest-rate-sensitive positions
The "Extent and Timing" Language: A Historical Signal
Decoding Fed Communication
The December 2025 FOMC statement included particular wording that Fed observers identified as holding important meaning: "The Committee will assess all available data, which includes market predictions together with risk elements, to make decisions about their federal funds rate target range modifications."
Powell's Press Conference Signals
Fed Chair Jerome Powell reinforced this message during his press conference, stating, "We are well-positioned to wait and see how the economy evolves." He noted that following 75 basis points of cuts since September 2025 (and 175 basis points since September 2024), the federal funds rate is now "within a broad range of estimates of its neutral value."
Market participants may need to recognise that the market requires strong evidence before it considers additional interest rate reductions.
2026 Voting Rotation: Hawks Enter the Committee
Can New Voters Shift the Balance?
The FOMC's rotating voting structure means new regional Fed presidents gain voting rights each January. For 2026, the incoming voters include:
Beth Hammack (Cleveland Fed) – Hawkish leaning
Lorie Logan (Dallas Fed) – Hawkish leaning
Neel Kashkari (Minneapolis Fed) – Hawkish leaning
Anna Paulson (Philadelphia Fed) – Moderate to Dovish leaning
According to EY-Parthenon chief economist Gregory Daco, Cleveland's Hammack, Minneapolis's Kashkari, and Dallas's Logan may be expected to fall into the hawkish camp, while Philadelphia's Paulson may be more moderate.
Contrarian Perspective: Why the Cutting Cycle May Not Be Over
While markets currently price in approximately one cut for 2026, several factors suggest the dovish case is not fully priced:
Labour market concerns: The unemployment rate edged up to 4.4% as of September 2025, with Fed officials acknowledging that downside risks to employment have increased.
Philadelphia Fed's Paulson explicitly stated that unemployment concerns outweigh inflation worries in her view, and she will become a voting member in January 2026.
Governor Miran advocated a 50bp interest rate reduction because he wanted the monetary policy to make a stronger adjustment.
The effects of tariffs will disappear: Paulson explained that price increases caused by tariffs will disappear during 2026, which could lead to inflation control without needing any policy changes.
The market shows signs of undervaluing future 2026 rate reductions because of these elements.
Risk Management Considerations
Navigating Policy Uncertainty
The divided FOMC creates specific challenges for market participants:
Two-way risk for rate-sensitive positions: The dissenting opinions between hawks and doves create conditions where unexpected data releases will lead to rapid market movements between two possible directions for forex pairs and bond instruments.
The Fed speakers will deliver opposing market messages after the blackout period ends because they will support different market perspectives, which will produce unstable market movements.
Market participants may need to evaluate different hedging methods when policy uncertainty reaches its highest point
Reduce financial product investments, which show a high market rate sensitivity.
Adapt options strategies that benefit from increased volatility
Diversify across different investment vehicles, which react differently to interest rate changes.
Key Dates to Watch
16 December 2025, November employment data release
27-28 January 2026 Next FOMC meeting (first with 2026 voting rotation)
17-18 March 2026 March FOMC meeting (with updated SEP/dot plot)
Conclusion
The FOMC made its December 2025 decision by cutting interest rates by 25 basis points while showing different opinions about handling multiple economic challenges. The future path has become more ambiguous than markets anticipated, as three officials opposed the decision, while seven others forecast no cuts for 2026 and the addition of new members who back strong policies to the decision-making group. The division between these two interest rate levels functions as a warning system that indicates that monetary policy changes may occur through either positive or negative surprises. The Federal Reserve may establish its future rate reduction strategy by studying upcoming economic statistics, which will guide its monetary policy decisions. The Fed maintains complete control over its upcoming decisions, as these actions may differ from all previous monetary policy cycles.
*Past performance does not reflect future results. The above are only projections and should not be taken as investment advice.
FAQs:
What was the December 2025 FOMC vote outcome?
The committee voted 9-3 to cut rates by 25 basis points to a range of 3.5%-3.75%. Governor Miran wanted a larger 50bp cut, while Presidents Goolsbee and Schmid preferred no change
What does the dot plot show for 2026?
The median projection indicates a single 25bp cut will occur in 2026, yet seven members of the committee predict no reductions will take place.
Who are the new FOMC voters in 2026?
Cleveland's Hammack, Dallas's Logan, Minneapolis's Kashkari, and Philadelphia's Paulson rotate in as voting members. Hammack, Logan, and Kashkari lean hawkish, while Paulson may be more dovish.