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The Federal Reserve may be regretting not starting its rate-easing cycle in July as the monthly U.S. jobs report released Friday pointed to contraction risks for the world’s largest economy, KPMG Chief Economist Diane Swonk said Friday.
Swonk was among traders and Wall Street analysts on Friday expressing anticipation that the central bank will deliver a hefty rate cut at its next meeting after July payrolls sharply slowed to 114K additions from June. Stocks (SP500)(COMP:IND)(DJI) sold off Friday slid and Treasury yields (US2Y)(US10Y) dropped.
“The Fed is likely feeling remorse over its decision to wait on rate cuts, given they clearly discussed them at the July meeting. They will be forced to cut more aggressively in September before the window on a softish landing closes entirely,” Swonk said in a post on X (formerly Twitter).
Odds of a rate cut sized at 50 basis points in September surged to ~70% Friday, according to the CME FedWatch tool. The U.S. unemployment rate rose to 4.3% in July.
The rise in unemployment is “hard to ignore,” Swonk said in a separate X post Friday. “One of the Fed’s worst nightmares is the nonlinear nature of unemployment. It tends to rise slowly, then rapidly. This is what former @NewYorkFed prez Dudley was warning about a week and a half ago,” she said.
Former New York Fed President Bill Dudley had said the Federal Open Market Committee should start rate cuts in July. The FOMC this week held the fed funds rate at 5.25%-5.5%, where it’s been for a year.
“The Fed is always late to the game. Late to start raising and now to start lowering. The US economy does have a strong underpinning and we don’t see a recession in the near future,” Ross Gerber, CEO and president of wealth and investment firm Gerber Kawasaki, said in an X post Friday.
“However, the Fed did miss their chance to be ahead of the curve and they might have to do .50% [rate cut] in September,” Gerber said.
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