Jan Hatzius and David Mericle – economists at the banking giant Goldman Sachs – predicted that the US Federal Reserve will start lowering interest rates from the second quarter of 2024. Many experts have previously suggested that such a pivot could boost investor interest in risk-on assets, including stocks, commodities, and cryptocurrencies. Still Uncertain About the Pace According to Hatzius and Mericle, the US central bank – the Federal Reserve – will start a gradual reduction of interest rates from the end of June next year. They are still unsure about the declining temp, highlighting 25 basis points of cuts per quarter as the most possible scenario. “The cuts in our forecast are driven by this desire to normalize the funds rate from a restrictive level once
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Jan Hatzius and David Mericle – economists at the banking giant Goldman Sachs – predicted that the US Federal Reserve will start lowering interest rates from the second quarter of 2024.
Many experts have previously suggested that such a pivot could boost investor interest in risk-on assets, including stocks, commodities, and cryptocurrencies.
Still Uncertain About the Pace
According to Hatzius and Mericle, the US central bank – the Federal Reserve – will start a gradual reduction of interest rates from the end of June next year. They are still unsure about the declining temp, highlighting 25 basis points of cuts per quarter as the most possible scenario.
“The cuts in our forecast are driven by this desire to normalize the funds rate from a restrictive level once inflation is closer to target,” they stated.
The economists also believe the Fed will not increase the rates during its next FOMC meeting in September and conclude that “the core inflation trend has slowed enough to make a final hike unnecessary” in November.
“Normalization is not a particularly urgent motivation for cutting, and for that reason, we also see a significant risk that the FOMC will instead hold steady.”
Goldman Sachs’ financial experts believe the Fed will continue dropping the interest rates until reaching a 3-3.25% benchmark.
The Federal Reserve has launched quite an aggressive strategy ever since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, aiming to reduce the disaster’s short-term devastating economic effect by printing colossal money and raising interest rates.
It lifted the benchmark 11 times between March 2020 and July 2023, hampering the interest in riskier assets, such as cryptocurrencies. Some believe one of the contributing factors for the digital asset market to flourish again will be the end of that policy. The CEO of Galaxy Digital – Mike Novogratz – and the founder of SkyBridge Capital – Anthony Scaramucci – are some examples.
What About an Earlier Pivot?
Tom Lee – Managing Partner and the Head of Research at Fundstrat Global Advisors – also thinks the Fed will start cutting interest rates in 2024. Unlike Goldman Sachs’ economists, though, he forecasted that this could happen from Q1:
“Most people believe it’s the second half because the Fed doesn’t want to tighten rates, but if inflation’s falling, they have to cut rates. Otherwise, it’s actually stricting the economy more.”