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It’s morning again in America: Interest rate cuts are on the horizon

As investors peer into 2024 the issue that is top of mind is how much the Federal Reserve will ease monetary policy in the coming year. Before this week’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, investors were optimistic about the Fed easing policy next year, and the bond market was pricing in rate cuts of a full percentage point, 4.25 percent to 4.5 percent, by year’s end.

The Fed did not disappoint investors this time, as it signaled it was close to pivoting monetary policy. As Nick Timiraos of The Wall Street Journal notes, this represented a dramatic change in Chair Jerome Powell’s stance from two weeks prior when he stated “It would be premature to … speculate on when policy might ease.” Following the FOMC meeting, Powell said that rate cuts were “coming into view” and “clearly a topic of discussion.”

The principal reason is officials are more confident that inflation is on the path toward its 2 percent target in the wake of a series of benign readings. The median expectation of Fed officials in the December FOMC projections calls for the core rate of personal consumption expenditures to fall to 2.4 percent next year from 3.2 percent this year.

The “dot plot” indicates that most participants anticipate three rate cuts of one-quarter point each in 2024. Additional cuts totaling 175 basis points are expected in the next two years such that the fund rate would fall below 3 percent by the end of 2026.

This news spurred large rallies in both the stock and bond markets. The Dow Jones Industrial Average set a record high above 37,000 while the 10-year Treasury yield fell below 4 percent. In the process, the bond market is now pricing in rate cuts of about 150 basis points in the coming year — two more cuts than were expected prior to the meeting.

The Fed’s projections for the economy implicitly assume there will be a “soft landing.”  Unemployment is expected to rise only marginally in the next two years to 4.1 percent, while the pace of economic growth is expected to moderate from 2.5 percent this year to 1.4 percent next year and then revert to its long-term trend of 1.8 percent per annum.

One issue Fed officials have not addressed explicitly, however, is how they would respond if a recession were to unfold. Powell acknowledged in the FOMC press conference that this remains a possibility because the large rate increases over the past two years have weakened housing and business investment. Consumer fundamentals are also showing some signs of deterioration as household savings are depleted.

One reason investors expect the Fed to move aggressively is they are well aware of its behavior over the past two decades: It has been quick to take interest rates to zero when a recession materializes and the financial system is at risk, but slow to tighten when an expansion is underway.

During the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed also adopted “unconventional policies” such as quantitative easing that quadrupled its balance sheet to shore up the financial system. The Fed then repeated these actions when the economy slumped during the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, even though the economy rebounded soon after businesses reopened.

The basis for doing so was spelled out in a new strategic framework in 2020 that set a flexible average annual inflation target of 2 percent. At that time, the Fed was concerned about the risk of deflation, and the new framework enabled it to tolerate inflation overshoots following periods of undershoots. The new policy framework represented a significant departure from the Fed’s strategy in 2012 that established a balanced approach for its dual mandate of price stability and full employment.

In a Wall Street Journal op-ed, Mickey Levy and Charles Plosser argued that the new framework was misguided and eschewed preemptive monetary tightening just when higher inflation appeared imminent: “The benefits of the Fed’s balanced approach were cast aside for asymmetries and greater reliance on the Fed’s discretion and judgment.”  

It is only during the past two years that the Fed has raised interest rates materially and has begun to shrink its balance sheet as consumer price index inflation surged to 9 percent.

In light of what transpired, Fed officials need to clarify the lessons to be drawn from the recent experience. While they have reaffirmed their commitment to controlling inflation, they have not provided clear guidance on how they will balance the twin objectives of price stability and maximum employment going forward. With the next review of its policy framework not scheduled until 2025, Fed policymakers need to assess the experience with “unconventional” monetary policies before then.

My take is that ultra-low interest rates and quantitative easing may have lessened the impact of recessions, but they also contributed to significant capital market distortions. The policy of keeping interest rates artificially low in the mid-2000s ultimately led to the housing bubble that was the precursor of the 2008 financial crisis. Thereafter, real interest rates were consistently low-to-negative until this past year, and investors were incented to stretch for yield and add riskier assets to their portfolios.

With inflation still somewhat above the Fed’s target and unemployment low, the Federal Reserve should resist the temptation to revert to unconventional policies if the economy softens and the stock market sells off. 

The good news is that with interest rates now positive in real terms, the Fed has ample room for maneuver without having to go full throttle.

Nicholas Sargen, Ph.D., is a consultant with Fort Washington Investment Advisors and is also affiliated with the University of Virginia’s Darden School of Business. He has written three books including “Global Shocks: An Investment Guide for Turbulent Markets.”

Tags Fed interest rates high interest rates Jerome Powell Politics of the United States Quantitative easing

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