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October 2024




The Fed: The Fed Getting Ready to Cut Interest Rates



Paul Single Managing Director
  • The Fed is singularly focused on keeping labor growth strong.
  • Inflation looks like it is headed to the Fed’s goal of a sustainable 2.0%.
  • Consumer spending remains strong, but continued gains in labor are needed for it to be sustainable.

The Fed kicked off its easing cycle by going big by slashing the federal funds rate by 50 basis points instead of the 25 basis points they usually move. They opted for the more assertive approach due to the cooling labor market and high confidence that inflation is headed toward their target rate of 2.0%. The Fed is proactively trying to ease the pressure off the economy to ensure the growth in the labor market reaccelerates.


 

 

Chart 1: Federal Funds & Fed’s Longer-Term Rate
 %, not seasonally adjusted

Source: Federal Reserve Bank, as of October 1,  2024.

Information is subject to change and is not a guarantee of future results.


Before the move, the federal funds rate at 5.375% was well above the Fed’s “longer term” rate of 2.5%. This is the interest rate the policymakers believe will help components of the economy (GDP, inflation, and unemployment) converge to provide maximum output and sustainably low unemployment and inflation – the rate that neither spurs nor slows economic activity. For the past two years, the Fed has kept the federal funds rate well above the longer-term rate as a restrictive monetary policy stance. It has worked, with inflation declining. The longer-term interest rate is now at 2.9%, and the Fed plans to have the federal funds rate at that level by the end of 2026, implying that the Fed will be at a neutral level.

The Fed believes their path of interest rate declines will bring about a “soft landing,” the ability to bring down inflation without causing a jump in joblessness. The Fed has not completed that task, but they have made significant progress. There is still some more work to be done. The Fed doesn’t have a set course for interest rate changes but will adjust its planned interest rate cuts based on the incoming data. The financial markets are a tad more aggressive than the Fed’s current plan for interest rate cuts in 2025. However, they are consistent with the Fed’s view by the end of 2026 (Chart 2). The financial markets appear concerned that labor growth will slowly recover in the next year.

Chart 2: Federal Funds Futures: Change from Current Level
%, as of October 1, 2024

Source: Source: Federal Reserve Bank, Bloomberg’s WIRP page as of October 2024.

Information is subject to change and is not a guarantee of future results.

 

 



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