This is an excerpt from Yardeni Research Morning Briefing dated Monday, January 13, 2025.
From March 2022 through August 2024, there was widespread concern that the tightening of monetary policy by the Fed over that period would cause a recession. It was the most widely anticipated recession that didn’t happen on record. Once the Fed started easing monetary policy on September 18, 2024, it was widely expected that the Fed would have to lower interest rates significantly to avert a recession. Now that scenario has lost its credibility, especially following Friday’s strong employment report for December.
The bond and stock markets have been recalibrating the outlook for the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy. The Fed cut the federal funds rate (FFR) by 100bps from September 18 through December 18 and signaled that more cuts are ahead in 2025. Bond market action suggests that investors have come around to our view that the Fed was stimulating an economy that didn’t need to be stimulated and that inflation was getting sticky north of the Fed’s 2.0% target. We argued that the economic and inflation data were signaling that the so-called neutral FFR was closer to 4.0%-5.0% than to 3.0%. We disagreed with the Fed’s view that the FFR was too restrictive when it was around 5.0%.
Our view has rapidly become the consensus view in recent weeks, especially after Friday’s strong employment report. That view can be described as a “higher-for-longer” interest-rate outlook, but “normal-for-longer” is the way we prefer to look at it. One of the reasons that we dissented over the past three years from the consensus forecast that a recession was coming is that we believed that the Fed’s monetary tightening simply brought interest rates back up to their normal levels in the years prior to the Great Financial Crisis and wouldn’t unduly stress the financial system, culminating in a recession (Fig. 1 below).
In his September 18, 2024 press conference, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that the 50bps cut in the FFR announced that day by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) was simply a recalibration of monetary policy: “So we know that it is time to recalibrate our policy to something that is more appropriate given the progress on inflation and on employment moving to a more sustainable level. So the balance of risks are now even. And this is the beginning of that process I mentioned, the direction of which is toward a sense of neutral, and we’ll move as fast or as slow as we think is appropriate in real time.”