The Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve building in Washington, DC, US, on Thursday, Dec. 28, 2023.
Valerie Plesch | Bloomberg | Getty Images
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What you need to know today
The bottom line
The U.S. Federal Reserve hasn’t lost its role as one of the main driving forces for markets.
Last December the Fed put its foot on the accelerator for stocks — perhaps inadvertently — when it announced its projection of three rate cuts for 2024. Yesterday, minutes of that December meeting caused stocks to plummet.
The good news first: Minutes showed Fed officials concluding rate cuts in 2024 are likely.
“Almost all participants indicated that, reflecting the improvements in their inflation outlooks, their baseline projections implied that a lower target range for the federal funds rate would be appropriate by the end of 2024,” the document said.
But that’s nothing new. We already knew that from the dot plot released last month.
The part that spooked markets: “Participants … reaffirmed that it would be appropriate for policy to remain at a restrictive stance for some time until inflation was clearly moving down sustainably toward the Committee’s objective.”
Logically speaking, that’s not news to markets, either. “Data-dependent” has been the favorite phrase of the Fed over the past six months. And it’s understandable to say cuts will happen only when inflation’s ebbing.
But the minutes also indicated an “unusually elevated degree of uncertainty” about the path of monetary policy, suggesting even the three cuts aren’t set in stone — although, to be fair, the dot plot is just a projection, not a promise.
Compare that sentiment, however, with the six quarter-point cuts markets are expecting and it’s easy to see why markets reacted the way they did yesterday.
The S&P 500 lost 0.8%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.76% and the Nasdaq Composite fell 1.18%, its fourth consecutive losing day. Meanwhile, yield on the 10-year Treasury briefly crossed the 4% mark as investors fretted over unexpectedly higher-for-longer interest rates.
Jobs data will come out Friday, and data on U.S. consumer price index in exactly a week. Both numbers will not only determine the path of rates, but also where markets go.
— CNBC’s Jeff Cox contributed to this report.