In a keenly watched two-day meeting, the first after the inauguration of the new US President, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) of the US Federal Reserve (Fed) decided to pause its kept federal fund rates in 4.25%-4.5% range, after cutting it overall by 1% over its three previous meetings. The decision to pause is governed by a strong and resilient labor market and persisting inflation.
In a post meeting press interaction, Fed Chairman Jerome Powell noted that “The unemployment rate has stabilized at a low level in recent months, labor market conditions remain solid, and Inflation remains somewhat elevated.” He further added that the Fed needs to see “real progress on inflation or some weakness in the labor market before we consider making adjustments.”
Most notably, he emphasized that we're meaningfully above the ‘neutral rate’. He said, “I have no illusion that anyone knows precisely how much that is and but having cut 100 basis points means that it's appropriate that we not be in a hurry to make further adjustments.” (‘Neutral rate’ is a fed rate that is considered neither stimulative nor restrictive of growth under the current circumstances.)
Higher for longer: The market participants have taken this to imply that the current rate cut cycle is certainly not over and may resume after a pause, as the Fed gathers more evidence on inflation. Nonetheless, analysts now appear less sanguine about the lower bound of the present rate cut cycle. The consensus amongst them is emerging that the long-term bottom rate may have risen to 3% from the earlier estimates 2.5%. The ‘Fed pause’ is also being influenced by uncertainties surrounding the new administration's direction - on fiscal, trade, and government spending matters. The Fed officials noted “they don't intend to react until policies reach the implementation stage and begin to impact incoming economic data”.
Markets: Post the Fed decision, stock prices ended lower (S&P500 -0.5%), USD marginally stronger (DXY +0.2%) and benchmark bonds stronger (US 10yr Yield -0.37%).
RBI: The ‘Fed pause’ has made the February 06th rate cut by the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), less certain. There are however more chances that RBI may change its stance to ‘accommodative’ from ‘withdrawal of accommodation’, signaling now growth is a priority over inflation.
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