Half of a Percent Rate Cut? It’s Worse Than We Thought.

by Dave Kranzler
Investment Research Dynamics

“The US economy is in a good place and our decision today is designed to keep it there.” – Jay Powell at his post-FOMC press conference

Here’s the opening sentence to the latest FOMC policy statement: “Recent indicators suggest that economic activity has continued to expand at a solid pace.” Think about it for a moment: why does the Fed need to cut rates at all given that the alleged unemployment rate is low relative to history, the stock market is at a record high and housing prices are at all-time highs? As the global head of Deutsche Bank’s economic research (Jim Reid) wrote: “the interest rate cut of a half-percentage-point to kick off its easing cycle looks harder to justify than those in 2001 and 2007.” I qualify that by saying “at least on the surface.”

The Fed only cuts 50 basis points at the start of a rate cut cycle as it did in 2001 and 2007 after there’s been a severe deterioration in the markets or the economy. We know the economy is not expanding at a “solid pace,” unless the Fed’s definition of “solid” is the opposite of the dictionary definition.

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