Every day, CNBC Investing Club with Jim Kramer releases home stretches. Market Movement: Stocks have been relatively stifled after Monday’s S&P 500 and NASDAQ records ended. Investors are mostly sitting in their hands ahead of Wednesday’s Federal Reserve rate decision. The central bank’s policy making committee is expected to cut interest rates by 25 basis points. According to the CME FedWatch tool, the single-digit chance of a 50 basis point rate reduction is still low, but that’s what’s been put into the market. Investors hope that prices will drop in hopes of unlocking the frozen housing and manufacturing sectors, but the 50-base point cut could surprise Wall Street as it shows that the economy is in worse shape than the market believes. At the same time, fee reductions are expected at all Fed meetings through January 2026. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell must say that rate passes can also be moved through the market. US Manufactured: Eli Lily announced Tuesday plans to build a $5 billion factory near Richmond, Virginia. The announcement comes as President Donald Trump threatened serious tariffs on the pharmaceutical industry, which relies on imports from Europe. Lily is one of the more aggressive pharmaceutical companies when it comes to reusing its plans. The company said in February that its investment in US manufacturing has doubled to more than $50 billion since 2020 by building four new pharmaceutical sites. The new facility is the first of four, one of three focusing on the production of so-called active drugs and formulations used in targeted cancers and autoimmune drugs. Eli Lilly currently does not have a factory to manufacture these products. CEO David Ricks told CNBC’s Angelical Peebles the facility will allow the company to move some of its production from third parties and “other nodes primarily from Europe” to the new site. Conference Comments: Industrialists were pretty much low on Tuesday, and part of the reason could be in response to Emerson Electric’s downbeat comments at the JPMorgan conference. CEO Lal Karsanbhai described the current environment as a divided environment by geography and verticality. Karsanbahi pointed out that this was a year in which the areas of strength became stronger as the years progressed, and some of the weakened areas became weaker. He put the United States in a stronger category. However, the company was hoping for growth in China and Europe this year. Instead, both areas became negative. As a result, Emerson looks at revenue and orders in the fourth quarter of the fiscal year, ending in September and ending at the bottom of the guidance. Despite sales declines, management praised the execution as a reason the revenues are at the top of the guide. Emerson also cited its power, liquefied natural gas, and the strength of life sciences. The market ended the market and cited the weakness of bulk chemicals and automobiles rather than improved and strength in factory automation. It’s a year, an industrial year, and companies that are heavily linked to data center construction, electrification, power generation and aerospace are far ahead of other sectors. These themes carry this sector and have seen this play in this portfolio through disappointment at Dover’s stock performance despite profits at Eaton and Ge Vernova, as well as the company’s double-digit revenue growth. We are still robbing banks in the market to realize the latter three values, and a bright presentation by DuPont Management could begin on Thursday’s Investor Day. Next: There are no major revenue reports after the closing bell on Tuesday. General Mills reports ahead of Wednesday’s opening bell. On the data side, weekly mortgage applications, monthly housing starts and permits are built. The main events of the day were the conclusions of the Fed’s two-day policy meeting and its highly anticipated interest rate decisions. Policy decisions will be at 2pm ET and Powell’s press conference will begin in 30 minutes. (For a full list of Jim Kramer’s Charitable Trust stocks, see here.) As a member of the CNBC Investment Club with Jim Kramer, you will receive a trade warning before Jim can trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before purchasing or selling stocks in the Charitable Trust portfolio. If Jim talks about stocks on CNBC TV, he will wait 72 hours after issuing a trade alert before running the trade. The above investment club information is subject to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy, along with the disclaimer. Due to receiving information provided in connection with the Investment Club, there is no obligation or obligation of the fiduciary. No specific outcomes or benefits are guaranteed.