One thing is clear: the US economy is still running a bit hot. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth for 2023 was above the long-term rate, which kept inflation somewhat warm. Still, growth slowed late in the year and will probably continue declining this year. Inflation fell sharply last year and is likely headed lower again in 2024. Neither number is at its target yet, but they’re close and headed in the right direction. In combination, they argue against the Fed immediately resetting the policy rate to neutral.
But we don’t think they argue against rate cuts altogether, because the policy rate is still more than double the Fed’s estimate of the neutral rate. That situation isn’t sustainable: it would make no sense to have an economy in equilibrium and a policy rate well above equilibrium.
Massive Scope for Rate Cuts Ahead
That, more than anything, is our takeaway from the Fed’s messaging. The policy rate will come down—and by a lot. We can’t say for sure when the first cut will happen, but with the rate almost three percentage points above neutral, the scope for rate cuts over the next few quarters is massive. Even if the economy enjoys a soft landing—as we expect—the Fed will still be making sizable cuts.
That aspect is much more important than whether rate cuts start in March, May or June. In our view, investors who stay on the sidelines and focus on timing the first rate cut risk could miss out: markets look ahead, and the Fed has told us that the path involves significant policy easing.