Fed Delivers Dovish Shift, Restarts Rate-Cutting Cycle

The Federal Reserve resumed its rate-cutting cycle at the September meeting, lowering its policy rate by 25 basis points (bps) to a range of 4%–4.25%, after being on hold since its previous cut in December. The Fed also signaled a less restrictive stance to come amid mounting labor market weakness. We are aligned with market consensus and Fed projections in forecasting two more 25-bp interest rate cuts before year-end.

The tone of the Fed statement – alongside updated projections (the “dot plot”) signaling expectations for a string of interest rate cuts and Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference – indicated that concerns over weakening labor market activity have begun to outweigh concerns over inflation, which remains largely driven by tariffs. At the same time, the labor market deterioration was not deemed substantial enough to warrant accelerated cuts. Powell characterized the 25-bp cut as a “risk management” move, while underscoring that a 50-bp cut wasn’t seriously discussed.

The decision was not unanimous. Newly confirmed Governor Stephen Miran dissented in favor of a larger 50-bp cut, while the dot plot indicated one official preferred to keep rates unchanged at this meeting. Nonetheless, the majority of officials appear to support a gradual path toward neutral monetary policy – which the central bank estimates to be around 3% – over the next few years.

The Fed also maintained its current balance sheet policy of gradually reducing its holdings of U.S. Treasuries and agency mortgage-backed securities. (For our latest views on the Fed’s mortgage holdings, please read PIMCO Perspectives, “A Fed Housing Fix That’s Hiding in Plain Sight.”)

Well-telegraphed move doesn’t rattle markets

The Fed’s decisions were broadly in line with expectations. Market reaction was initially muted, but yields on intermediate-maturity U.S. Treasuries rose and ended the day modestly higher.

Ahead of the meeting, futures markets were already pricing a high probability of two additional 25-bp rate cuts this year. The Fed’s longer-run path toward neutral had already been priced in as well, as investors anticipated that policymakers would respond to deteriorating labor conditions.