We have seen three analyst view changes since Friday's January CPI report, all delaying rate cut expectations, from Jefferies, SEB and SocGen. It builds on mutiple similar calls after Wednesday’s NFP report from CIBC, Citi, Commerzbank, ING, Natixis, TD Securities and Wells Fargo (see here). Fed Funds futures price a cumulative 21.5bp of cuts for June, 32bp for July and 63bp for year-end.
- Jefferies delayed a cut by one meeting to April vs only ~7.5bp priced: "We had been looking for the Fed to cut rates at the next FOMC meeting in March due to deteriorating labor market conditions and complicit downward trends in the inflation data. However, the January NFP data failed to set off the requisite alarm bells. We noted a number of reasons to be skeptical about the strength of the employment report in our response to the data, but the data is what it is, and it isn't enough to get the hawks on the Committee to change their mind in the next month. We expect that increases in jobless claims in the coming weeks, a softer February report, and continued concern about the labor market in the weeks following will probably be enough to tilt the scales in April, given that the inflation data we are seeing is eroding the hawks' case for keeping policy rates steady."
- SEB: “The data was not low enough to change the near-term picture for the Fed, and we no longer expect a March cut. However, inflation trends remain surprisingly benign, and we stick to our view of three cuts in 2026.”
- SocGen: “Consequently, given a likely strong economy and inflation remaining sticky, it was time to revisit our projection for the Fed funds rate in 2026 as well and align our modal projection with the risk of less policy easing we had flagged earlier after the January FOMC meeting. We now only expect one 25bps rate cut, likely at the June meeting. But continued economic strength also means there’s a notable risk that this rate cut could be postponed beyond June.”