The Federal Reserve remains on hold in the short term, but don't expect the rate cut window to be closed for long. Brian Martin, Head of G3 Economic Research at ANZ Bank, latest insights dispel this misconception — the Fed is highly likely to keep rates steady in January, but this is just a transitional period, and the pace of rate cuts won't pause for too long.
His forecast is as follows: the federal funds target rate will be cut by 25 basis points in March, with another similar adjustment in June. If this pace continues, by mid-year, the target rate could fall to the 3.00%-3.25% range.
The logic supporting this judgment is also solid. First, the inflationary impact of tariffs last year is waning; second, wage growth is slowing; third, housing inflation is cooling. Combining these factors, US inflation pressures are expected to gradually ease by 2026, creating space for the Federal Reserve to restart rate cuts.
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RugResistant
· 01-14 07:48
Ha, another prediction of "interest rate cuts coming soon." I've seen this play out too many times... But this time, the logic is quite solid—tariff effects fading, wages slowing down, housing prices cooling. It does sound a bit plausible.
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MetaverseVagabond
· 01-14 07:40
See you in March, time to go all in again.
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TommyTeacher
· 01-14 07:35
See you in March. Whether it really drops or not will be the highlight; anything said now is just pointless.
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ReverseFOMOguy
· 01-14 07:23
You're trying to fool us into bottom-fishing again, huh? I've heard the March and June predictions too many times. And in the end? Each one more boastful than the last...
The Federal Reserve remains on hold in the short term, but don't expect the rate cut window to be closed for long. Brian Martin, Head of G3 Economic Research at ANZ Bank, latest insights dispel this misconception — the Fed is highly likely to keep rates steady in January, but this is just a transitional period, and the pace of rate cuts won't pause for too long.
His forecast is as follows: the federal funds target rate will be cut by 25 basis points in March, with another similar adjustment in June. If this pace continues, by mid-year, the target rate could fall to the 3.00%-3.25% range.
The logic supporting this judgment is also solid. First, the inflationary impact of tariffs last year is waning; second, wage growth is slowing; third, housing inflation is cooling. Combining these factors, US inflation pressures are expected to gradually ease by 2026, creating space for the Federal Reserve to restart rate cuts.