The 24 Hours of Rate Cuts That End Year of Global Central-Bank Easing

(Bloomberg) -- A year when inflation subsided enough for monetary policy easing to start in most advanced economies is about to conclude with a 24-hour flurry of decisions led by the Federal Reserve.

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The US announcement will take center stage on Wednesday, followed by peers in Japan, the Nordics and the UK over the following day — amounting to half of the world’s 10 most-traded currency jurisdictions.

Those events will draw most attention among investors bracing for the last big week for monetary policy in 2024. By close of play on Friday, at least 22 central banks accounting for two-fifths of the global economy will have set borrowing costs.

The upshot is likely to underscore how momentum for easing now looks increasingly uneven as policymakers weigh up differing risks in the coming year.

While the Fed itself is poised to deliver a quarter-point rate cut, the dawn of 2025 and the prospect of inflationary import tariffs threatened by the incoming administration of Donald Trump may give officials pause about the pace of further moves.

What Bloomberg Economics Says:

“Trump has promised a whirlwind of actions that will affect inflation and economic activity, complicating the FOMC’s job. Because monetary policy works with a lag, policymakers aim to set policy at each meeting based on their best understanding of the economic circumstances that will prevail a year or two ahead. In setting the federal funds rate at the next few meetings, policymakers will assess the odds that Trump’s various proposals will be implemented, and balance their risks.”

—David Wilcox, director of U.S. economic research. For full analysis, click here

The Bank of England, mindful both of the growth shock his trade policies could cause but also of lingering price pressures, is reducing borrowing costs only cautiously and is widely expected to keep them on hold on Thursday.

The Bank of Japan meanwhile, having finally exited negative rates this year, will probably wait until 2025 before raising again.

Decisions in the Nordics will highlight divergence even across a smaller region. Sweden’s Riksbank is almost certain to cut for the fifth time, and its Norwegian counterpart is likely to confirm that its first reduction of the cycle won’t come until next year.

Elsewhere, key data on the health of China’s economy, a likely pickup in UK inflation and business surveys from the euro zone may be among highlights.