Fed rate in focus: What investors are watching today
|Key highlights
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The Federal Reserve is unlikely to cut rates this week despite Trump’s pressure.
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The central bankers are cautious, waiting to observe how tariffs impact the economy before considering rate cuts.
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The central bankers are cautious, waiting to observe how tariffs impact the economy before considering rate cuts.
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Investors will be looking for clues from Jerome Powell's remarks on Wednesday for any indication that the Fed is nearing an interest rate cut.
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Markets remain cautious following two days of trade talks between the US and China, which ended without any significant breakthrough.
Fed rate decision process
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Powell chairs the Fed’s eight annual meetings; the other 11 voting members share voting power equally.
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Recent meetings have seen lively debates, but decisions on interest rates have been unanimous so far this year.
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The Fed is expected to hold rates steady again this week; two voters have signaled support for cuts, see the following chart [by Barron’s].
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The President nominates the Chair and six governors, who serve 14-year terms.
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Five regional reserve-bank presidents, hired by local business leaders, also hold voting seats.
Additional key economic data this week
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The Bureau of Economic Analysis is set to publish its initial second-quarter GDP estimate on Wednesday, July 30, at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time.
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The BEA will publish its June data for the personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure, on Thursday, July 31, at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time.
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The Bureau of Labor Statistics will release its July Employment Situation report on Friday, Aug. 1, at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time.
US interest rate probabilities
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US IR probabilities show about 96.90% and 34.6% no rate change in July and September, respectively.
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The market is predicting 63.4% and 49.2% probability of a rate cut in September or October.
Technical Analysis Perspective
US interest rate:
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Since 1972, the key levels for US interest rates have ranged between 5.25% and 4.65%.
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A rate above 5.25% prompted additional hikes, reaching levels between 6.00% and 6.50%.
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A key takeaway from the chart is that a sharp decline below 4.65%–4.50% in 1972 led to a significant drop in rates to 3.50%. Additionally, rates fell to 3% in 1992–1993. There was a sharp decline during the 2008 financial crisis, as well as in the 2020 COVID era.
US inflation is heading higher
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Higher US inflation is causing Fed members to adopt a “wait and see” approach.
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While higher debt and debt servicing costs remain a key focus for the US administration.
US indices vs rate cut
- US key indices dropped after the rate cut, contrary to investors' expectations that the market would move higher.
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