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Fed Holds Rates Steady Again and Pivots Toward Cuts in 2024

The Federal Reserve held interest rates steady for a third meeting and gave its clearest signal yet that its aggressive hiking campaign is finished, forecasting a series of cuts next year.

Officials decided unanimously to leave the target range for the benchmark federal funds rate at 5.25% to 5.5%, the highest since 2001. Policymakers penciled in no further interest-rate hikes in their projections for the first time since March 2021, based on the median estimate.

Fed officials expect to lower rates by 75 basis points next year, a sharper pace of cuts than indicated in September's projections. While the median forecast for the federal funds rate at the end of 2024 was 4.6%, individuals' expectations varied widely.

Eight officials saw fewer than three quarter-point cuts next year, while five anticipate more.

A tweak to the post-meeting statement on Wednesday also highlighted the shift in tone, with officials noting they will monitor a range of data and developments to see if "any" additional policy firming is appropriate. That word was not present in the November statement from the US central bank's policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee.

In another shift, the committee also acknowledged that inflation "has eased over the past year but remains elevated." In addition, most participants now see the risks to price growth as broadly balanced.

Treasury yields plunged, while the S&P 500 index rose and the Bloomberg dollar index declined.

Chair Jerome Powell will hold a press conference with reporters at 2:30 p.m. in Washington. 

Inflation Forecasts

The updated projections also showed lower inflation forecasts for this year and next, with the Fed's preferred price gauge excluding food and energy now seen increasing 2.4% in 2024. Policymakers lowered their forecast for economic growth slightly for next year while keeping unemployment projections unchanged.

Policymakers anticipate further reductions in the fed funds rate to end 2025 at 3.6%, according to the median estimate of 19 officials.

The Fed's long-awaited pivot, following 5.25 percentage points of rate hikes, reflects a marked slowing of price pressures since mid-year and a cooling of the labor market. The challenge for Fed officials now is to decide when to start cutting rates, which if done too soon would endanger inflation's return to the Fed's 2% goal.

Officials have vowed to keep rates elevated long enough to ensure inflation returns to target. Market participants don't anticipate that will take very long, encouraging bets of rate cuts as soon as March.

Comments from Governor Christopher Waller, one of the most vocal supporters of the central bank's actions to tamp down inflation, helped fuel that speculation. He said in November the central bank would be willing to consider lowering the policy rate as inflation comes down, something he said could happen in three to five months.

Source: Bloomberg

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