Why the Fed’s Picking Up Speed Toward Rate Cuts

Earlier interest-rate cuts would come as good news for the US economy.

Improving news on the inflation front will likely spur the Fed to kick off rate cuts earlier than we previously projected. This should begin to lift the pressure from the US economy and keep a soft landing as the most likely scenario.

Earlier Fed Rate Cuts Becoming More Likely

After a stretch of disappointing progress toward the Fed’s 2.0% inflation target, the picture has brightened in the last couple of months (Display). It’s improved enough that we now expect the first rate cut in September rather than at the end of the year. In our view, that translates into two 25 basis-point cuts this year instead of one—and quarterly rate cuts through 2025.

US Consumer Price Index Core Inflation (YoY Percent Change)

That means rates are poised to come down a lot over the next couple of years, easing pressure on the US economy. That would be timely, because mounting evidence suggests that higher rates are weighing on economic growth. We’re not alarmed—a slowdown has been our central case for a while—but leaving rates high for too long could turn a slowdown into a recession.

We think the Fed should, and will, act soon enough to keep that from happening.