Wall Street banks are calling for aggressive interest-rate cuts by the Federal Reserve based on the latest evidence that the labor market is cooling.
Economists at Bank of America Corp., Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and JPMorgan Chase & Co. revamped their forecasts for U.S. monetary policy Friday after data showed the U.S. unemployment rate rose again in July. All are calling for earlier, bigger or more interest-rate cuts.
Citigroup economists said they expect half-point rate cuts in September and November and a quarter-point cut in December, having previously predicted quarter-point cuts at all three meetings.
The Fed will then reduce rates by a quarter point at each meeting until mid-2025, bringing the policy band to 3% to 3.25%, Veronica Clark and Andrew Hollenhorst predicted.
JPMorgan economist Michael Feroli went a step further. While he also predicted half-point rate cuts in September and November, followed by quarter-point reductions at every subsequent meeting, Feroli said there's "a strong case to act" before the next meeting on Sept. 18.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell may not "want to add more noise to what has already been an event-filled summer," however, he wrote.
Friday's jobs report showed U.S. hiring slowed markedly while the unemployment rate rose to 4.3%, the highest in nearly three years. The rise in the jobless rate caused its three-month moving average to exceed the 12-month low by half a percentage point. According to the Sahm rule — devised by former Fed economist Claudia Sahm — that means a recession is underway.
That fueled a further rally in the Treasury market, with the policy-sensitive two-year yield tumbling as much as 31 basis points to 3.84%, the lowest since May 2023, before paring the drop.
Fed policymakers met earlier this week and signaled they are on course to start lowering borrowing costs as soon as September from the two-decade high reached a year ago.