The United States experienced a slight deceleration in its annual inflation
rate in November, in line with expectations. According to data released by
the Bureau of Labour Statistics on Tuesday, the year-on-year growth in
headline consumer prices declined to 3.1% last month, down from 3.2% in
October. The month-on-month reading showed a marginal uptick of 0.1%
against projections from economists 0.0%
The closely monitored “core” figure, which excludes volatile items such as
food and energy, recorded an annual rise of 4.0%, unchanged from the
previous month. On a monthly basis, underlying price gains accelerated
marginally to 0.3%, compared to 0.2% in October.
Markets have been pricing that the central bank may initiate rate cuts as
early as March next year, propelling the equity benchmark index to a new
high of 4,632 for 2023. The strong rally from the October lows unfolded
despite Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell emphasizing the Fed’ cautious
approach, until a proof that still heightened inflation is under control.
Despite the strongly overbought momentum readings, the index appears on
track to challenge its previous record high of 4,818.
Source: TradingView
In the final monetary policy meeting by the Federal Reserve for this year,
which is scheduled to conclude on Wednesday, the Fed is expected to
maintain interest rates on hold in the range of 5.25% to 5.50%. Tuesday’s
inflation report does not support further interest rate hikes. Fed officials
said number of times that inflation deceleration would be on a bumpy ride
and Tuesday’s report is one of them. Still inflation is on the right path
as it is decelerating, although slowly.
The labour market has been gradually softening and the Fed is likely to
maintain its cautious, data-dependent policy approach heading into the new
year when is considering starting to lower interest rates.
On Wednesday attention is likely to be concentrated on statements from Fed
chair Jerome Powell, particularly regarding the central bank’s plans for
potential rate cuts in 2024. The release of the Fed’s quarterly “dot plot”
which outlines policymakers’ projections for future rates, will be closely
scrutinized.
Investors are focused on when rate cuts will start and how fast they’ll go.
Markets are currently assigning an almost 50% probability of a rate
reduction in May next year, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. The chances
of a rate cut in March have dropped to 47% from 57% a week earlier. Overall,
Wall Street is already pricing in four rate cuts for 2024 expecting one
full percentage point reduction.