The so-called interest rate cut means that banks use interest rate adjustment to change cash flow. When the bank cuts interest rates, the income from depositing funds in the bank decreases, so the interest rate cut will lead to the outflow of funds from the bank, and the deposit will become investment or consumption, resulting in an increase in the liquidity of funds. Generally speaking, cutting interest rates will bring more funds to the stock market, so it will help the stock price rise. Interest rate cuts will promote the expansion and reproduction of corporate loans, encourage consumers to buy large-scale goods with loans, and gradually heat up the economy.
Instead, it is raising interest rates.