The Fed—We’ll Get There When We Get There!

Instead of pivoting directly toward an easing bias, the Federal Open Market Committee opted for a wait-and-watch approach in January. Franklin Fixed Income Economist Nikhil Mohan expects rate cuts to come, but not quite as soon as or as many as markets have been anticipating.

For months, we’ve pushed back against the idea that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will begin its easing cycle as early as March. Indeed, that is precisely what Fed Chair Jerome Powell confirmed at the January Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. Unsurprisingly, gone was any language that referenced “any additional tightening,” thus further cementing the December pivot.

Moreover, instead of pivoting directly toward an easing bias, the FOMC opted for a wait-and-watch, data-dependent approach. Powell explicitly stated that a March rate cut is not the base case, and that the Fed will need to have “gained greater confidence that inflation is moving sustainably towards 2%” before reducing the policy target range. I emphasize “sustainably” because several commentators (including Fed policymakers themselves) have pointed to sub-2% short-run inflation momentum measures—namely the three- and six-month annualized rates for core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) to justify an earlier start to the rate-cutting cycle. However, “sustainable” implies continued progress toward the Fed’s 2% target beyond the immediate short run, too. And there’s still some ways to go in that regard, with potential for hiccups on the way.

As far as the incoming economic data are concerned, there has been very little in it over the last few months to suggest the Fed should start cutting before the summer. If anything, a plethora of data has surprised to the upside since mid-January. Citi’s Economic Surprise Index shows an increase in positive data surprises over the said period.1

Positive Economic Surprises Have Been Rising Since Mid-January