
The Fed is likely to hold rates steady in the near term.
- The Fed held rates steady in April at 3.50-3.75%, matching expectations. However, one official dissented for a cut, while three opposed language suggesting the next move would likely be lower.
- Outgoing Chair Powell said the bar for easing was now higher, and that the center of the committee is shifting to a more neutral stance. He also revealed he will remain as governor “for a period of time to be determined.”
But we think the Fed’s policy easing bias remains intact.
Sequential core goods inflation is likely to keep softening in 2Q and 3Q, since tariff rates have mostly remained stable or declined recently.
We forecast oil prices below current levels by late 2026, while oil-related growth headwinds are likely to return GDP growth to trend, reinforcing disinflation in the second half.
We continue to expect two rate cuts later this year, though the balance of risks around timing is skewed toward a later start.
Lower interest rates strengthen the case for investors to lock in yields
- The case for quality bonds as a source of diversification and income is strong, especially those with short to medium maturities as the risk of tighter monetary policy remains overpriced, in our view.
- An allocation to emerging market bonds can enhance yields and offer an alternative to developed market fiscal challenges.
- Investors can also consider equity income and yield-generating strategies for a diversified income portfolio.
New this week
The Fed held rates steady last week at 3.50-3.75% as expected, but dissent grew: one official backed a cut and three opposed the dovish guidance. Meanwhile, outgoing Chair Powell revealed he will remain as governor for now, denying a potential seat for a more dovish replacement voter.
Did you know?
- Analysis by the Dallas Fed shows that the incremental price pressure due to rises in energy prices tends to fade quickly after a few months, with core inflation little changed.
- We think bond markets are currently too focused on the short-term inflationary impact of higher energy prices, and not enough on the potential medium-term negative growth impact, which could drive interest rate cuts, nor on the potential for de-escalation.
- Cash tends to underperform other assets over time: Stocks have outperformed cash in 86% of all 10-year periods and 100% of all 20-year periods since 1926.
Investment view
We believe markets continue to overprice the risk of a tighter Fed policy, presenting an opportunity for investors to "lock in rates." We like short- and medium-maturity quality bonds, and see value in select exposure to higher-beta segments such as emerging markets, high yield, or subordinated debt.
