Big banks push rate cut forecasts further

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Stocks (^DJI,^GSPC, ^IXIC) opened mixed on Thursday morning as investors begin to price in the idea of interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve not happening until after June. The Fed continues to affirm that rate cuts won't come until inflation is much closer to that target date, a point reiterated by Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan, who spoke to Yahoo Finance Executive Editor Brian Sozzi about potential policy decisions from the Fed.

Due to this current stance, many of the big banks have adjusted their rate cut forecasts to later in the year, including Bank of America, which has pushed back its forecast to December of this year.

Yahoo Finance Reporter Josh Schafer joins The Morning Brief to break down the adjusted forecasts for a rate cut and how this will impact the market .

For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Morning Brief.

This post was written by Nicholas Jacobino

Video Transcript

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BRAD SMITH: Today's top stories, stock futures rising as investors come to terms with the reality that rates could remain higher for longer as inflation remains sticky. Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester saying on Wednesday that they will cut at some point, but that there's no hurry. Bank of America CEO Brian Moynihan spoke to Yahoo Finance's Executive Editor Brian Sozzi on Wednesday and gave his thoughts on the Fed's battle with inflation. Hear you this.

BRIAN SOZZI: They've got to win the war on inflation, and they are winning, and it's coming down and they've got it on the right trend and that's the great debate of the gold rates a little higher to make sure they've got it on the right trend. And so it's always been sticky, the past would tell you it would take longer period of time, especially when they started late, and they admit that. And therefore, it took a little longer to wring out of the system.

BRAD SMITH: And so we've talked time and time again around where some of the probability has slipped, for now, consecutive meetings, and I think even increasingly among economists, they're looking for some of the rate cuts if they do begin to begin at the very end, perhaps, Q4 of this year at this juncture.

And just looking at some of the CME FedWatch tool, we had seen that shift, especially within that June meeting jump on the back of last week's inflation data that had started to come through two no cuts, and now continuing to signal that it's going to stabilize that a no-cut type of scenario even until we get into September, perhaps. September is now at a 45%, 46% probability of a cut. And again, that is something that we thought we were going to see in June here, and it depends upon the pacing as you bring up all the time too, Seana.