Fed Sets Stage for Rate Cuts Amid Growing Confidence on Inflation

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday kept interest rates on hold, as expected, while making modest, dovish changes to its policy statement, setting the stage for a potential rate cut in September. Still, Fed Chair Jerome Powell stopped short of signaling anything beyond September, instead emphasizing that policy committee discussions will be made meeting by meeting and will depend on the evolution of the outlook.

We have not changed our expectation for the Fed to cut rates in September and December this year. Recent good news on inflation – and importantly, confirmation of progress toward more moderate owner's equivalent rent (OER) inflation in the second half of the year – as well as normalization in job vacancies, have increased our confidence that U.S. inflation will continue to moderate gradually.

As a baseline, we think Fed officials are planning to initiate rate cuts at a once-per-quarter pace, starting in September, continuing until policy is closer to neutral. That said, the U.S. election in November could be disruptive due to trade policy shifts that could weigh on growth and boost inflation. Given this uncertainty, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will likely want to cut rates gradually and respond to economic developments as they arise, and it will not want to pre-commit to a specific sequence of actions.

Dovish statement tilt

The Fed revised the language in its policy statement to convey two key points: (1) officials have growing confidence that inflation will at least land within a “two-point-something” zone, and (2) as a result, the risks to the Fed’s inflation and employment dual mandate are now much more balanced. Both changes signal the timing of rate cuts is drawing near but stop short of signaling anything about the pace of cuts after they commence.

The statement’s first paragraph acknowledged the recent sequence of better inflation prints – both on wages and prices – while noting that labor markets have continued to cool. The statement specifically mentioned moderating but still solid job gains. More important, in our view, but not explicitly mentioned: The ratio of vacancies to unemployment has completely recovered from the acute labor shortages of 2021 and 2022, signaling underlying inflationary pressure trends have moderated.

Both the cooling in the labor market and the resumption of progress on inflation, following what Fed officials have called a “bumpy” first quarter, argue for a more balanced risk outlook, suggesting that a gradual pace of rate cuts can soon commence.