HomeNewsOpinionThe US Fed is wrong about how low interest rates will go

The US Fed is wrong about how low interest rates will go

This time around, the market has it right. The federal funds rate will probably stay a lot higher than what officials are projecting

April 04, 2024 / 20:58 IST
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US Federal Reserve
While the Fed’s projections for 2024 look likely to be more accurate than the market’s at the start of the year, this time around it’s the central bank, not the market, that will probably have to adjust.

Financial markets and the US Federal Reserve remain in disagreement on a subject crucial to asset prices and economic growth: how low interest rates will eventually go.

Betting against the Fed is a fraught endeavour. Nonetheless, in this case I think the market is right.

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Markets and the Fed now agree about 2024: Futures prices are consistent with officials’ median estimate of 75 basis points of cuts in the federal funds rate. Yet forecasts for the next few years diverge. Futures indicate that short-term interest rates will bottom out at about 3.75 percent in 2027, while the median forecast among members of the policy-making Federal Open Market Committee is 2.6 percent — more than 100 basis points lower.

Why the difference? I see two reasons. First, market participants expect average inflation to be higher than the Fed’s 2 percent target. This makes sense, because the target is asymmetric: The central bank is committed to offsetting downside misses with comparable misses to the upside, but not the other way around. Chair Jerome Powell never talks about pushing inflation below 2 percent to offset the high readings of recent years, and official projections don’t indicate any such intention. As a result, average inflation should exceed 2 percent. The greater the volatility of inflation over time, the larger the divergence should be.