Fortune | FORTUNE 2024年11月27日
Deutsche Bank warns Trump tariffs could stop Jerome Powell from cutting Fed rates at all next year
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2025年新总统将入驻白宫,此时关于美联储利率政策的讨论仍在继续。华尔街分析师对其下一步动作存在分歧,各方观点围绕利率走势展开。

🏦华尔街分析师对美联储利率走势看法不一,乐观者希望年底降息,也有观点认为应谨慎。

💱一些银行预计2025年利率稳步下降,可能达中性水平;但德银分析师认为特朗普时代政策或阻碍降息。

📈不同分析师对未来经济预测及利率影响有不同看法,如瑞银分析师预计2025年底美联储将降息。

A new president will enter the White House in 2025, but some debates remain the same. Wall Street analysts are split over the Federal Reserve’s next moves on interest rates, dissecting recent remarks from policymakers as 2024 nears its end.With just one Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting left this year, Jerome Powell and his colleagues are wrapping up a period marked by the first rate cuts in the current cycle.Optimists are hoping for a year-end rate cut in December, while others urge caution. Some banks project a steady path of cuts in 2025, potentially bringing rates to a neutral level of around 3.25%.But not everyone agrees. Analysts at firms like Deutsche Bank warn that incoming Trump-era policies, such as inflationary tariffs, could stall further rate reductions.“There’s two things. One is just the details of the underlying economy that we see now, which is the consumer has remained resilient … the labor market looks more resilient and more stable than what we thought, and inflation has been higher over the last several months,” said Matthew Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank in an interview with Bloomberg TV Tuesday. “I think you’ll see that when the Fed updates their forecasts. The unemployment is going to come down, growth is going to come up, inflation is going to come up.” Luzzetti added that these factors would likely lead to a pause in the Fed’s rate-cutting strategy, but continued, the new policy would compound these factors.“Overlay with that policy changes that we expect: extensions of tax cuts, perhaps further tax cuts, tariff policy which lifts inflation. All of that leads to this dynamic of stronger growth, higher inflation that stays above 2.5% and a neutral policy rate that’s closer to 4% and the Fed’s above 4.” December’s meeting coincides with the Fed’s summary of economic projections, which is when the FOMC updates analysts on its forecasts for inflation, unemployment, growth and more. Updates reflecting an inflationary environment are unlikely to be inked into December’s projection, Luzzetti added, and will instead be included in the next scheduled forecast advisory in March.Luzzetti’s take is at odds with some of his peers on Wall Street. Brian Rose, UBS’s senior U.S. economist, for example, is sticking by his call for continued cuts throughout next year.On Tuesday, he wrote in a note seen by Fortune: “The market has priced out some Fed rate cuts recently, but we still expect the Fed to cut rates a total of 125 basis points by the end of 2025, bringing its target range to 3.25-3.5%, in line with our estimate of neutral.“However, if inflation proves to be stickier than we expect, then the Fed would likely end up leaving rates closer to 4%.”What voting members are sayingWhile all FOMC members are invited to share their thoughts with the committee, only 12 have voting power.This alternates year-to-year, and in 2025, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee will have voting rights.With geopolitical tensions still high heading into the new year—throwing into question supply-side stability coupled with potentially inflationary supply policies—President Goolsbee outlined that he’s ready to deal with the ripple effects of such events.Speaking to Matthew Klein of The Overshoot, President Goolsbee said: “You have to figure out whether these are temporary supply shocks or permanent supply shocks. That matters a lot. “And you have to figure out, is this a one-time cost increase but a temporary inflation shock, or is this something that’s going to keep spiraling and gets flooded into expectations?” He explained: “The conventional wisdom … was you don’t tighten into a supply shock, but you try to prevent the secondary impacts on inflation. “The direct impact of higher oil prices, there’s nothing you can do about that. You’re going to get inflation from it. But you try to prevent wage-price spiraling, you try to prevent it from getting folded into expectations where you can’t get rid of it. That’s still probably right. “In a way we can’t yet update conventional wisdom for this episode until it’s done and we’ve actually figured out how much was supply and how much was demand.”How many degrees of separation are you from the globe's most powerful business leaders? Explore who made our brand-new list of the 100 Most Powerful People in Business. Plus, learn about the metrics we used to make it.

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美联储 利率政策 华尔街分析师
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