The stock market has stayed resilient this year after a brutal 2022 that was roiled by persistent inflation, the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes, Covid shutdowns and geopolitical tensions.
Experts say that the Fed won’t cut rates anytime soon for two key reasons: Inflation remains sticky, and the economy has stayed strong.
In other words, there’s nothing — at least, not yet — to convince the Fed it should pivot to lowering rates.
“The Fed rarely cuts rates without some sort of crisis in between,” said Kara Murphy, chief investment officer at Kestra Investment Management.
A serious turn for the worse in the banking sector, an implosion in the labor market or a similar nosedive for the economy would have to occur for the central bank to lower rates in July, says Liz Ann Sonders, chief investment strategist at Charles Schwab.
Would a July cut benefit stocks?
Even if the Fed were to bring rates down soon, an immediate bull run isn’t guaranteed.
“Assuming that the May 3 rate increase was the last of this cycle, stocks should perform quite well through the remainder of the year. However, if the Fed were to ease in July — as the futures imply — the upside would be far more limited,” the analysts said.
Between 1972 and 1974, then-Fed Chair Arthur Burns hiked interest rates dramatically. Then, he cut them back down as the economy contracted.
When inflation later ripped higher, the Paul Volcker-led Fed took drastic action to push interest rates up to tame it. The effective Fed funds rates topped 22% by its peak in July 1981, and the central bank’s aggressive tightening helped trigger back-to-back recessions that drove the unemployment rate as high as 10%.
Powell acknowledged the missteps in a speech last August at Jackson Hole. The Fed has since signaled that it likely won’t lower rates this year and reaffirmed its commitment to tamping down inflation.
“I don’t think that the Fed is going to be in any hurry to cut rates this time,” said Marco Pirondini, US head of equities at Amundi.
that’s not to say that a Fed rate cut this year is completely out of the cards, says Nicole Webb, senior vice president at Wealth Enhancement Group. The Fed eventually will want to lower rates back down, but it likely won’t want to do it at the historical pace it’s raised them over the past year, she says.
“They can slowly pace us down to 2.5% without the inflation monster rearing its ugly head again,” Webb said. “And I do actually believe it’s possible.”
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