Rate Cuts Begin

The European Central Bank and Bank of Canada cut rates this month, signaling that the monetary easing cycle is likely underway as long as inflation comes down. The two central banks have diverged from the Fed, but we believe the Fed is also likely to cut rates later this year. Monetary tightening is likely behind us, with the exception of Japan.

In the U.S., we remain focused on inflation and the labor market. There are some soft spots in the labor market with the unemployment rate rising by 0.4 percentage points on a three-month average basis. But, as seen in the most recent May payroll report, job gains are still running well above the breakeven rate for the U.S. economy (estimated to be ~100-125k), which was helped by immigration flows on the margin. Economic growth is normalizing from the red hot pace of the past two quarters. Progress on inflation has been spotty, but it has resumed in the most recent readings. We expect inflation to continue to get closer to the Fed target by the end of the year. With this backdrop, our fixed income team expects about two cuts this year.

In the U.S., we remain focused on inflation and the labor market. There are some soft spots in the labor market with the unemployment rate rising by 0.4 percentage points on a three-month average basis. But, as seen in the most recent May payroll report, job gains are still running well above the breakeven rate for the U.S. economy (estimated to be ~100-125k), which was helped by immigration flows on the margin. Economic growth is normalizing from the red hot pace of the past two quarters. Progress on inflation has been spotty, but it has resumed in the most recent readings. We expect inflation to continue to get closer to the Fed target by the end of the year. With this backdrop, our fixed income team expects about two cuts this year.