The United States is poised for a significant economic shift in 2024, as it is likely to enter a recessionary phase. This anticipated downturn will necessitate substantial reductions in interest rates, as predicted by UBS, a leading European financial institution.
In a detailed analysis conducted in November, UBS projected that the Federal Reserve will undertake aggressive measures to counteract declining inflation and economic slowdown. The bank anticipates a dramatic rate decrease of 275 basis points, a figure nearly quadruple the 75-basis-point reduction currently expected by market analysts, as indicated by the CME Group's Fedwatch tool.
UBS's analysis, spearheaded by economist Arend Kapteyn and strategist Bhanu Baweja, forecasts a significant easing cycle by the Federal Reserve beginning March 2024. They predict a sharp drop in rates to approximately 1.25% by the first half of 2025, a response to the projected US recession in the second and third quarters of 2024 and a deceleration in both headline and core inflation rates.
Since March 2022, the Federal Reserve has escalated borrowing costs from near-zero to about 5.5% in an effort to control rampant inflation, which peaked at a 40-year high of 9.1% in June of the previous year. While inflation has shown signs of abating, it remains significantly above the central bank's 2% target.
This aggressive monetary tightening is expected to impact the economy, though the US has managed to avert a recession thus far. The nation's GDP grew by 4.9% in the third quarter, marking the highest growth rate in two years. Additionally, the labor market has remained resilient despite the Federal Reserve's interest rate hikes, with unemployment rates slightly increasing but still maintaining a level below 4%.
Contrasting with the recession forecast by Kapteyn and Baweja is a different perspective from Jason Draho, UBS's head of asset allocation for the Americas. Draho envisions a period reminiscent of the "roaring '20s," characterized by robust GDP growth, heightened inflation, and rising bond yields and interest rates, bolstered by the unexpected resilience of the US economy this year.
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