Bank of America CEO on the potential of a soft landing: Yahoo Finance at Davos

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With the Federal Reserve's continued higher for longer interest rates, the economy has slowed to a pace at which it may reach its target inflation goal of 2%, without triggering a recession. Many on Wall Street are now all but sure that this will allow for a soft landing, but is there more at play?

Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan (BAC) sits down with Yahoo Finance Anchors Brian Sozzi and Julie Hyman from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland to discuss the potential for a soft landing, factoring in the labor market, the housing market, and more.

It's all part of Yahoo Finance's exclusive coverage from the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, where our team will speak to top decision-makers as well as preeminent leaders in business, finance, and politics about the world’s most pressing issues and priorities for the coming year.

Editor's note: This article was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

BRIAN SOZZI: The market has priced in a soft landing for the economy. And a lot of folks here at Davos for the World Economic Forum also looking for a soft landing. Let's talk to Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan. Brian, great to get some time with you, as always. Soft landing. What does that mean to you, actually, and do you see it playing out?

BRIAN MOYNIHAN: Well, it's great to be here. And what a soft landing is-- you don't go negative and GDP growth on a quarterly basis. And so our team, if we were talking last year, and we did talk last year, they basically said we were going to have a recession later in '23, early '24. And as the year went on, they pushed that out.

And so now their basic view is we drop from the growth rate in the third quarter for plus down to 1% annualized GDP growth for the first three quarters. That is a soft landing. It didn't go negative. But it landed and got near zero. And so that's the prediction. The team does a great job. And that's why they come out. And that's largely due to the consumer and the consumer strength and the resiliency and the spending and the capitalism and the entrepreneurialism and innovation US. The US is different.

BRIAN SOZZI: Are rates going to fall as fast as they rose?

BRIAN MOYNIHAN: Our team has four cuts next year and four cuts in '25. And so that gets you down into 3, 3 and 1/4, 3%, 3.5% range. So that will feel quick. But it's less the pace. It's where it stops out. And what would be good for the US is they could actually get to a normal rate curve, which for 15 years we haven't had. For a moment we had it and in '18-'19. And then they started cutting rates people. Forget it in '19 they had to cut rates to push the economy.