|

Markets now see more than 100 bps of cumulative rate cuts before the end of this year

Markets

At its keynote Jackson Hole speech on Friday, Fed Chair Powell explicitly reconfirmed the change in the Fed’s assessment on the balance between fighting inflation and preserving maximum employment it already signaled at the July policy meeting. ‘The upside risks to inflation have diminished. And the downside risks to employment have increased.’ The Fed’s confidence that inflation is on a sustainable path to 2.0% is growing. The labor market has cooled considerably from its formerly overheated state. Even as the rise in unemployment mainly comes from a rise in labour supply rather from layoffs, the Fed doesn’t seek or welcome a further cooling of the labour market. With respect to the potential pace of easing Powell stated that while keeping a data-dependent approach. ‘The current level of our policy rate gives us ample room to respond to any risks we may face, including the risk of unwelcome further weakening in labor market conditions.’ With this kind of remarks, Powell left all options open but didn’t formally challenge the market view that the Fed might move to 50 bps steps in a not that distant future. US yields on Friday closed between 8.8 bps (2-y) and 3.5 bps (30-y) lower. Markets now see more than 100 bps of cumulative rate cuts before the end of this year, with the low of the cycle seen near 3.0% (end 2025/early 2026). Despite Friday’s decline, US bond yields didn’t break recent (intraday) lows and are holding above the lows from the early August riskoff move. Still, the picture for the 2-y yield remains fragile. German yields declined between 2.5 bps (5-y) and 0.5 bps (30-y). The direction of travel for the dollar remains clear: south. DXY closed at a 100.72 (from 101.46). EUR/USD tested the 1.12 big figure (close 1.1192). Equity investors embraced the prospect of further, Fed-led easing of (global) financial conditions. US indices gained op to 1.47% (Nasdaq). The S&P 500 (+1.15%) closed less than 1.0% below its all-time peak. The Eurostoxx 50 added 0.5%.

Today’s calendar is modestly interesting with US durable goods orders and German Ifo confidence. US activity data are gaining importance as the Fed is putting less weight on inflation, but the durables’ series is very volatile. Even so, we look out whether the decline in US yields might slow as quite some easing is already discounted. German Ifo confidence is expected to confirm weakness in other recent data evidence. For German/EMU bond markets, inflation to be published on Thursday (Germany) and Friday (EMU), probably are more important. For now, we don’t fight the broader USD downtrend as long markets maintain the view that the Fed can move to 50 bps steps in a not that distant future. Key USD support kicks in at DXY 99.58 and EUR/USD 1.1276 (2023 top).

News and views

Bank of England governor Bailey said that policy settings will need to remain restrictive for sufficiently long until the risks to inflation remaining sustainably around the 2% target in the medium term have dissipated further. “The course will therefore be a steady one.” The UK central bank chief is nevertheless becoming more confident that things are heading in the right direction. Second round inflation effects appear to be smaller than the BoE expected. They are revising down their assessment on how persistent these pressures would be, though don’t take it for granted yet. Bailey gave no guidance for the outcome of the next, September, policy meeting. UK money markets attach a 25% chance to back-to-back rate cuts with the more likely scenario being that the BoE only implements a next 25 bps rate cut in November, when the new quarterly Monetary Policy Report will be released. Sterling continues outperforming both EUR and USD with cable (GBP/USD), breaching 1.32 for the first time since Q1 2022.

Brazil central bank governor Campos Neto warned at the Kansas City Fed’s Jackson Hole conference that the country’s tight labour market is challenging the central bank’s bid to rein in inflation. Consumer prices have been picking up across Latin America with Brazilian inflation hitting the 4.5% Y/Y ceiling of the tolerance range (3% +- 1.5 ppt) in July. With economic activity picking up, Campos Neto warned that the central bank’s data dependency could result in an higher policy rate if needed. The Brazilian central bank raised its policy rate from 2% in 2021 to a 13.75% peak by mid-2022. They started a gradual easing cycle in mid-2023, but paused it in June at a 10.50% policy rate. arlier this month, influential board member Galipolo who is rumoured to succeed Campos Neto when his term ends in December, indicated that a rate hike is on the table at the next (September) policy meeting.

Download The Full Sunrise Market Commentary

Author

More from KBC Market Research Desk
Share:

Markets move fast. We move first.

Orange Juice Newsletter brings you expert driven insights - not headlines. Every day on your inbox.

By subscribing you agree to our Terms and conditions.

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD gathers recovery momentum, trades near 1.1750

Following the correction seen in the second half of the previous week, EUR/USD gathers bullish momentum and trades in positive territory near 1.1750. The US Dollar (USD) struggles to attract buyers and supports the pair as investors await Tuesday's GDP data ahead of the Christmas holiday. 

GBP/USD rises toward 1.3450 on renewed USD weakness

GBP/USD turns north on Monday and avances to the 1.3450 region. The US Dollar (USD) stays on the back foot to begin the new week as investors adjust their positions before tomorrow's third-quarter growth data, helping the pair stretch higher.

Gold not done with record highs

Gold extends its rally in the American session on Monday and trades at a new all-time-high above $4,420, gaining nearly 2% on a daily basis. The potential for a re-escalation of the tensions in the Middle East on news of Israel planning to attack Iran allows Gold to capitalize on safe-haven flows.

Top 10 crypto predictions for 2026: Institutional demand and big banks could lift Bitcoin

Bitcoin could hit record highs in 2026, according to Grayscale and top crypto asset managers. Institutional demand and digital-asset treasury companies set to catalyze gains in Bitcoin.

Ten questions that matter going into 2026

2026 may be less about a neat “base case” and more about a regime shift—the market can reprice what matters most (growth, inflation, fiscal, geopolitics, concentration). The biggest trap is false comfort: the same trades can look defensive… right up until they become crowded.

XRP steadies above $1.90 support as fund inflows and retail demand rise

Ripple (XRP) is stable above support at $1.90 at the time of writing on Monday, after several attempts to break above the $2.00 hurdle failed to materialize last week. Meanwhile, institutional interest in the cross-border remittance token has remained steady.