Michael Hicks: We are nearing Fed rate cuts
The past three months of economic data offer an increasingly clear picture to
I prefer a July rate cut, with a couple caveats.
The
Getting all this right is devilishly hard, if not impossible.
All this work is done transparently, with formal public statements (see https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/fomccalendars.htm). Fed economists speak publicly about their models, publish them in journals and often move in and out of universities.
First, Fed economists are looking at inflation. The whole of their efforts for more than two years have been to restrain inflation enough that we don't plunge the economy into recession. What they're now seeing is inflation slow dramatically. As of the June release, the
Over the past three months, the average annual growth rate is at 2.4%, or just inside the targeted rate of 2% to 2.5%. There are several reasons for this target. First, if inflation is pushed too low, the economy will slow too much and we could slip into a recession. So, it is better to accommodate some modest inflation.
There will be one more measure of Personal Consumption Expenditure data released before the July Fed meeting. If it is low, or even modestly negative like it was last month, that will at least trigger the Fed to say it expects to cut rates in September. If it is high, say above 2.5%, we should expect them to hold off on rate cuts past their September meeting.
GDP growth also has been surprisingly strong over the past year. The
This strong economic growth permits the Fed to delay reducing interest rates until it is more certain about inflation. Remember, the senior Fed economists are mostly in their 50s and 60s and attended graduate school in the 1980s. At the time, inflation had plagued the
Fed economists are rightly concerned with inflation. With unemployment rates at more than 50-year lows, there's little in the macroeconomic data to suggest risk of a recession. It is difficult to find real data that indicates economic or financial stress in the country.
Delinquency rates on credit card loans sit at 3.16%, well below the 30-year average of 3.73%. Mortgage delinquency rates are at 1.71%, a low point since the summer of 2006. Household debt payments, as a share of family disposable personal income, is lower now than at any time from 1980 to COVID. Wages are up more than 4.08% from this time last year, while inflation is up 3.25%.
In other words, all the talk of a crashing, risk-filled economy where people are struggling is unsupported by actual data. The adults at the Fed are worried about data.
However, the strong performance of the domestic economy is not an absolute brake on the Fed lowering interest rates. In fact, several prominent economists, including
I agree.
Absent a hot inflation report in late July, the Fed should cut rates a quarter point at its
This action would also signal we are firmly in soft landing territory, in what was probably the most effective Fed intervention in history.



Paychecks grew more slowly this spring, a sign inflation may keep cooling
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