Markets have been quick to price in rate cuts after the Fed finished its fastest hikes since the 1980s – and price them out when inflation spooked to the upside. As the Fed readies to start cutting, markets are pricing in cuts as deep as those in past recessions. See the chart. We think such expectations are overdone. An uptick in the unemployment rate has stoked recession fears, yet employment is still growing. The unemployment rate is not rising due to layoffs, but because elevated immigration has expanded the workforce. Consumer spending shifting back to services from goods after the pandemic has helped inflation fall from its recent highs, allowing the Fed to cut rates. A larger workforce is helping cool services inflation. Yet in this new regime, central banks face a sharper trade-off between curbing inflation and protecting growth than in the decades-long period of steady growth and inflation.
Cooling inflation is likely temporary. The post-pandemic normalization of spending and supply mismatches is largely over, while immigration is likely to fall back to historic trends. Once it does, the economy won’t be able to add jobs as fast as it has been without stoking inflation. Wage growth has slowed but not enough to suggest that core inflation could fall to the 2% target. Supply constraints from mega forces, or structural shifts, are set to add to global inflation pressures. That’s why the Fed and other central banks will keep rates higher for longer. Yet short-term U.S. Treasury yields have slid on expectations for deep rate cuts, so we went underweight. We stay overweight U.S. stocks but broaden our artificial intelligence view beyond tech. Our Midyear Outlook scenarios acknowledge the low odds of the Fed cutting rates as much as markets expect. That could occur if the Fed sees cooling job growth as a sign it’s been too slow to react to worsening growth, echoing its rapid rate hikes. Risk sentiment may sour once it’s clear the Fed won’t cut rates as low as markets expect.
Going global
The European Central Bank (ECB) cut rates again last week even as inflation is above its target for now. We see euro area inflation falling to 2% and staying near there, unlike in the U.S. That’s still far from the low inflation of the past decade. But the ECB tightened policy more than the Fed – even as it faced weaker economic activity – so it has more room to cut rates, in our view. We’re neutral euro area government bonds and UK gilts as market pricing of rate cuts could go further, in our view.
The People’s Bank of China has been cutting rates but it’s not in the same boat as the Fed. It’s facing weak consumer demand, excess production capacity and deflation – based on broad measures of inflation – that could become entrenched. The lack of fiscal and other policy support casts doubt on if the economy will hit this year’s growth target. Export activity has been supporting growth, so it will be key to watch for any signs of weakness. Chinese equity valuations are low relative to other regions but given the tough macro outlook, we prefer developed market equities over emerging markets and China.
Our bottom line
The Fed is following in the footsteps of other central banks to cut rates this week. We see sticky inflation limiting how far central banks can cut. We stay overweight U.S. equities and prefer European over U.S. bonds.
Read More: Weekly market commentary | BlackRock Investment Institute