HomeWHENWhen Will Feds Cut Rates

When Will Feds Cut Rates

Wondering what’s in store for interest rates?

Since July 2023, the Federal Reserve has kept the federal-funds rate at a target range of 5.25% to 5.50%, far above typical levels over the past decade. But we expect the first federal-funds rate cut to come in May or June 2024, bringing the rate down to 4.00% to 4.25% at the end of 2024.

Fed Inches Closer to 2024 Rate Cuts

We expect the Fed to continue cutting through the end of 2025, ultimately bringing the federal-funds rate down by over 300 basis points. Our long-run expectation for the 10-year Treasury yield is 2.75%, significantly below the current yield of 4.30%, as of Feb. 23, 2024.

In our latest Economic Outlook, we detail that falling inflation will make this pivot possible in early 2024. Slowing gross domestic product growth (and a slight rise in unemployment) in 2024 will add a further reason for the Fed to cut.

Why Did Interest Rates Increase So Much in 2022 and 2023?

The Fed has pushed interest rates higher since early 2022 in order to quash high inflation. From March 2022 to July 2023, the Fed increased the federal-funds rate by 5 percentage points, marking the largest and fastest rate hike in 40 years. The Fed has also engaged in “quantitative tightening”—selling off about $1.4 trillion from its long-term securities portfolio since June 2022.

Get the full report: Q1 2024 Economic Outlook

The United States (and many other countries) had experienced a decade of low interest rates after the 2008 global financial crisis and the Great Recession. The 10-year Treasury yield averaged 2.4% from 2010 to 2019, compared with 4.3% today. The federal-funds rate was near zero much of the time, averaging 0.6% from 2010 to 2019. We did see interest rates tick up in the prepandemic years but only slightly (the 10-year averaging 2.5% from 2017 to 2019, and the federal-funds rate averaging 1.7%).

Now with interest rates reaching levels not seen since the mid-2000s, many are wondering whether we’ve shifted to a new regime of higher interest rates.

Higher interest rates have meant higher borrowing costs for consumers and businesses. The 30-year mortgage rate stands at about 6.9%, a massive jump compared with the 3.0% average in 2021 and far above the 4.2% average in the prepandemic years (2017 to 2019). Mortgage rates reached a high of 7.8% in November 2023, the highest in over 20 years.

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Higher interest rates are designed to slow down spending in interest-rate-sensitive sectors like housing. This cools off the broader economy, helping achieve the Fed’s goal of reducing inflation.

Yet, the US economy proved more resilient to the impact of higher rates than expected in 2023. Widespread fears of a recession did not play out. Housing activity fell sharply, but much of the rest of the economy has been unscathed.

Also, the impact of the surge in the federal-funds rate is somewhat cushioned by the inversion of the yield curve. Recall that the fed-funds rate is under the direct control of the Federal Reserve, allowing the Fed to control short-term risk-free interest rates. Longer-run interest rates are influenced by the Fed but only indirectly. Yield-curve inversion refers to a situation where short-run rates (such as the fed-funds rate) rise above long-run rates (such as the 10-year Treasury yield).

Contrary to much commentary in the financial press, yield-curve inversion is not contractionary. There is a historical correlation between yield-curve inversions and recessions, but the statistical significance is weak using cross-country evidence. From a causal perspective, an inverted yield curve actually stimulates the economy compared with a flat yield curve (holding short rates fixed) because it means lower borrowing rates on long-term debt. Because the yield curve has inverted so much, the Fed has been forced to hike the federal-funds rate more than it would have otherwise to sufficiently cool off the economy.

Of course, even while the Fed failed to cool down the demand side of the economy in 2023 very much, inflation ended up falling anyway because of supply-side improvement, which is unrelated to monetary policy.

When Will Interest Rates Go Down?

We expect the Fed to start cutting rates beginning with the May 2024 meeting.

The Fed will pivot to monetary easing as inflation falls back to its 2% target and the need to shore up economic growth becomes a top concern.

1) Interest-rate forecast. We project the federal-funds rate target range to fall from 5.25% to 5.50% currently to 4.00% to 4.25% by the end of 2024, to 2.25% to 2.50% by the end of 2025, and to 1.75% to 2.00% by first-half 2026, after which the Fed will be done cutting. Likewise, we expect the 10-year Treasury yield to go down to 2.75% in 2025 from its current yield of 4.30%. We expect the 30-year mortgage rate to fall to 5.0% in 2025 from an average of 6.8% in 2023.

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2) Inflation forecast. It looks like inflation will return to normal without a recession. We expect inflation to fall from 3.7% in 2023 to an average rate of 1.9% over 2024-28, which dips slightly below the Fed’s 2.0% target. The continual downtrend in inflation will be owed greatly to the unwinding of price spikes as supply constraints ease and as the pace of economic growth slows.

The falling rate of inflation over the past year has defied the predictions of those in the stagflation camp, who thought that a deep economic slump would be needed to eradicate entrenched inflation. Instead, the inflation-GDP trade-off has been very kind.

Admittedly, there’s still some uncertainty about whether the Fed will go through with a cut midyear. This depends on Fed members’ own subjective assessment of whether progress on inflation is sufficient to begin cutting rates. But even supposing the Fed doesn’t cut in May, we think the inflation data in the second half of the year will leave no room for doubt on the appropriateness of cutting rates.

As long as the Fed is allowed to shift to easing in 2024, GDP should avoid a large downturn and start to accelerate in 2025 and 2026.

Housing is the most interest-rate-sensitive major component of the GDP, and we expect another 6% drop in housing starts in 2024. Higher mortgage rates combined with the earlier surge in housing prices mean that home affordability is at its worst since 2007. Lower mortgages will be needed to avert a deeper and prolonged downturn in the housing market.

Why Do We Disagree With Other Investors (and the Fed) on How Quickly Interest Rates Will Fall?

The nearly unanimous view now is that the Fed is done hiking rates, but there’s still much debate about when and how it will cut.

Markets have shifted closer to our views in recent months, owing to good inflation news. The market now agrees with us that the Fed will make five rate cuts through the end of 2024.

Looking beyond 2024, there’s still some divergence between our views and the market. By mid-2026, we expect a fed-funds rate more than 150 basis points below the market’s projection.

We believe the Fed will seek to lower rates from currently “restrictive” levels to a more neutral stance in early 2024, once victory over inflation comes into sight. Economic weakness in mid- and late-2024 will push the Fed to pick up the pace. In 2025, inflation will still be below target and unemployment a bit elevated, which will induce further cuts.

We expect inflation to come down quicker than consensus does, which is why we expect the Fed to eventually cut interest rates more aggressively than it currently projects. Likewise, other investors now appear too pessimistic about how quickly inflation will fall.

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Fed Rate Cuts Will Jump-Start GDP Growth

We expect that GDP growth will accelerate in the latter half of 2025 as the Fed pivots to easing, with full-year growth numbers peaking in 2026 and 2027. The resolution of supply constraints should facilitate an acceleration in growth without inflation becoming a concern again.

We expect a cumulative near-200 basis points more real GDP growth through 2028 than the consensus does. Consensus remains overly pessimistic on the recovery in the labor supply and has generally overreacted to near-term headwinds, in our view.

Resolution of Supply Constraints Plus Fed Tightening Will Crush Inflation

We expect inflation to fall to normal levels after peaking at 6.5% in 2022. We still think most of the sources of high inflation since the start of the pandemic will abate (and even unwind in impact) over the next few years. This includes energy, autos, and other durables. But supply chains are healing as demand normalizes and capacity catches up. These factors drove inflation down to 3.8% in 2023, and we expect the rate to fall further to 2.0% in 2024, with an average of 1.9% from 2024 to 2028.

We’re more optimistic about inflation coming down than consensus. We think consensus underrates the deflationary impulse likely to be provided by industries like energy and durable goods in coming years, as pandemic-era disruptions fade.

US Interest-Rate Forecast: What We See for the Future

In the short run, our interest-rate forecast is centered on the Fed and its attempt to smooth out economic cycles. The Fed seeks to minimize the output gap (the deviation of GDP with its maximum sustainable level) while keeping inflation low and stable. When the economy is overheated (the output gap is positive and inflation is high), as today, then the Fed seeks to hike interest rates to slow growth.

But our long-term interest-rate projections are driven more by secular trends than by the Fed. Instead, interest rates are determined by underlying currents in the economy, like aging demographics, slower productivity growth, and higher economic inequality. These forces have acted to push down interest rates in the United States and other major economies for decades, and they haven’t gone away. Regardless of what happens in the next few years, we expect interest rates to ultimately settle back down at the low levels prevailing before the pandemic. The low interest-rate regime will resume once the dust settles from the pandemic’s economic volatility.

For this reason, our interest-rate forecast includes the expectation that these rates will stay lower for longer. Even if we’re wrong in our near-term view that the Fed’s war against inflation will be a short one, our long-term view on interest rates remains valid. Our long-term analysis was detailed in our 2022 US Interest Rate & Inflation Forecast.

This article was compiled by Emelia Fredlick and Yuyang Zhang.

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