Last updated Nov 29, 2025
economymarkets
By roughly 6–9 months after February 2025 (i.e., by November 2025), prevailing U.S. interest rates (Fed funds rate or equivalent benchmark) could be around 5.0–5.5%, remaining at or returning to that range despite prior expectations of rate cuts.
in totality, we have $10 trillion we need to finance in the next 6 to 9 months. So it could be the case that we have rates that are like five, five and a quarter, 5.5%.View on YouTube
Explanation

Available data show that by roughly 6–9 months after February 2025 (August–November 2025), the U.S. federal funds rate target range was well below the 5.0–5.5% band Chamath speculated about.

Key facts:

  • By late 2024, the FOMC had already cut the target range from its 5.25–5.50% peak (reached July–September 2023) down to 4.25–4.50%, and that range was still in place as of early February 2025. (federalreserve.gov)
  • The Fed’s June 2025 Monetary Policy Report and contemporaneous analysis confirm that from January through June 2025 the federal funds target range was held at 4.25–4.50%, below 5%. (federalreserve.gov)
  • On September 17, 2025, the FOMC cut the target range to 4.00–4.25%. (haver.com)
  • On October 29, 2025, the Fed cut again, to 3.75–4.00%, where it remained through at least mid‑November 2025. (pcbb.com)
  • Time‑series data summarizing the "federal funds target range – upper limit" show values of 4.50% on July 30, 2025, 4.25% on September 17, 2025, and 4.00% on October 29, 2025, with no return to 5% or higher during that period. (tradingeconomics.com)

Since during the relevant 6–9 month window (August–November 2025) the federal funds target range never was and did not return to the 5.0–5.5% region Chamath described, the prediction that rates in that timeframe could be around 5–5.5% (implying they would remain there or move back up to that range) turned out to be incorrect in light of actual policy outcomes.