Thoughts on the Market

Why the Fed Will Cut Late, But Cut More

28 snips
Jun 26, 2025
Michael Gapen, Chief U.S. Economist at Morgan Stanley, dives into the Fed's future actions amidst inflation concerns and a slowing economy. He argues the Fed will hold rates steady initially but will eventually cut more than expected due to factors like tariffs impacting consumer spending. Gapen discusses how increasing oil prices could influence inflation rates and how these dynamics might affect treasury yields and the U.S. dollar. His insights reveal a complex interaction of policies and international events shaping market expectations.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Fed's Tariffs Timing Effect

  • Tariffs raise inflation immediately but reduce consumer spending with delay due to reduced real income.
  • The Fed will encounter higher inflation first, then a weaker labor market later, leading to late but larger rate cuts.
INSIGHT

Immigration's Impact on Unemployment

  • Immigration controls slow labor force growth drastically, from 3 million to 300,000 annually.
  • This makes it harder for unemployment to rise, so inflation pressure precedes a weak labor market for the Fed.
INSIGHT

Fed Views on Tariffs' Impact

  • The Fed expects tariffs to elevate inflation near term but considers this inflation transitory.
  • Tariffs also contribute to slower economic growth, confirmed by lower GDP forecasts.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app