In This Article:
October's Core PCE print ticks lower to 3.5% year-over-year, showing inflation to be cooling while still well above the Fed's 2% target.
EY Chief Economist Greg Daco says, "increased evidence that the disinflationary process is underway," though headwinds like rent prices and tight monetary policies persist. Still, Daco believes the trajectory allows for further declines, moving toward eventual interest rate cuts by regulators.
BMO Wealth Management US CIO Yung-Yu Ma argues "direction matters more than the timing." With markets revealing lower rate expectations, easing of financial conditions will translate into the real economy through things like borrowing costs. So while the market-implied inflation path likely "will not pullback too far" below 2% immediately, Ma believes sustained cooling momentum remains key.
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Video Transcript
- Good to have both of you on today. Greg, I'm going to start with you, with that question that Jen just raised, which is, is this latest print enough for the Fed to say, yes in fact, we do fear feel comfortable keeping rates where they are right now?
GREG DACO: I think so. I think we're seeing increased evidence that the disinflationary process is well underway. We are in an environment where we're seeing gradually cooling final demand for goods and services, we still have more disinflation coming from the rent sector, and we have monetary policy that's restrictive. That's the ideal combo to continue pushing inflation lower.
We've been saying for quite some time now that inflation will fall faster than the Fed has been anticipating. This is now materializing. So we're anticipating by early next year, we'll be close enough to the Fed's 2% target to start talking about rate cuts. And we think the first rate cuts will come in June. So yes, we are on this right trajectory.
- And Yung-Yu Ma, I want to bring you in here because we've seen a lot of analysts agreeing that perhaps second half of 2024 is when we could see rate cuts, even though the Fed speak saying something slightly different. But you say the direction matters more than the timing. Break that down for us.
YUNG-YU MA: That's right. We do think the markets will key off of the Fed's main message that will evolve in 2024 to be a trajectory of rate cuts and a softening message before that. And whether or not there are two rate cuts, three four, we think that's less important. And even the timing is somewhat less important if it takes place in May, June, or later in the summer. Really the direction for the markets is what's going to be helpful and help to shift psychology. And also help to lower borrowing costs in advance of those rate cuts.