Investors will have to wait until at least July for those widely expected interest-rate cuts, according to one Federal Reserve presidentâs outlook.
Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said rate cuts probably wouldnât be suitable until the third quarter given the current strength of the economy.Â
Thatâs a quarter earlier than he originally predicted, Bostic said, thanks to just how quickly inflation is slowing. Bostic added that he is anticipating two rate cuts in 2024.Â
âIf inflation continues going down faster than I expected, then Iâll adjust and adapt,â Bostic said, speaking to the Money Marketeers of New York University. âBut I want to be sure⦠that weâre getting true signals, as opposed to volatility.âÂ
He said the course of the inflation rate over the year is likely to be âdirectionally the same but bumpy.â
Bostic, who is voting on the Federal Open Market Committeeâs policy decisions this year, said he is âgratefulâ the economy has maintained strong growth and a robust labor market even as the inflation rate falls.
Yet he said he remains âvigilantâ over the risk of cutting rates too soon and spurring a re-acceleration in inflation.
âThe stronger the economy is, the harder itâs going for prices to fall rapidly,â he said. âI do think that in the set of [potential] problems to have, this is one of the better ones.âÂ
Inflation eased in January but came in above Wall Street
DJIA
expectations, with consumer prices up 3.1% from the same month a year earlier. That higher-than-expected reading jolted the markets Tuesday and dashed investorsâ hopes that officials could start cutting interest rates as early as the next Fed meeting in March.
Bostic echoed Fed Chair Jerome Powellâs previous public comments that officials will need to see more evidence that inflation is under control before they move to cut rates, especially given the CPI report.Â
He added that bringing the inflation rate down to the Fedâs 2% target remains the top priority.
âThatâs got to be job number one. I donât want to make this too complicated,â he said. âI worry we underestimate the cost and the pain that high inflation imposes on people.â
He also warned against relying on assumptions drawn from the past history when trying to plot the course for 2024. Current conditions defy prior conventions of how monetary policy affects the economy, he said. Â
âEconomic history does not seem to be repeating itself,â he said. âIf there is an overarching lesson Iâve taken from the pandemic experience, it is humility: to expect to be surprised.â