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The Federal Reserve is done hiking but is not ready to start
cutting.
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Fed Chair Jerome Powell poured cold water on hopes of March rate
cut.
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FOMC decisions would depend on incoming data.
The Federal Open Market Committee voted unanimously on Wednesday to leave
the benchmark interest rate unchanged as widely expected in a target range
between 5.25% and 5.5% for a fourth straight month.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell tempered expectations that the central
bank could start cutting interest rates in March, as he seeks further
evidence that inflation in the U.S. is continuing to slow towards the 2%
target amid robust economic growth and resilient labour market.
In a further sign that the Federal Reserve is not likely to cut interest
rates in March, Jerome Powell said that it was not likely the committee
will reach a level of confidence by March to cut rates, though continued to
stress that future policy decisions would depend on incoming data.
According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the odds of a March rate cut dropped to
30% from 65% prior to the statement. Also, Jerome Powell pushed back
against market expectations for five to six interest rate cuts and
reinforced that the committee projects 75 basis points of cuts in 2024.
The Fed decided to hold borrowing costs at 23-year highs after its latest
policy meeting but changed its tone for the first time and flagged that is
no longer considering additional interest rate hikes. The change of
Language was perceived to mean that the central bank had finally called the
end of the most aggressive tightening cycle.
Source: TradingView
The tech heavy index, which is the most sensitive to interest rates,
declined after the Fed meeting as sentiment was dented by the diminishing
expectations for a March interest rate cut. Nonetheless, we are of the view
that such weakness would be temporary, and we see good prospects of the
index trading higher in the year ahead.
The index is up 5% YTD and a whopping 23% since its October 2023 low. This
surge has been driven by the biggest tech companies or “Magnificent Seven”
with the exception of Tesla, which has been trending down since July 2023
and is the only laggard.
Six of the seven companies comprising the “Magnificent Seven” such as
NVIDIA, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Alphabet, Microsoft, and Apple, have
reported robust Q4 earnings and are likely to continue to be the positive
contributors for the tech index in 2024.
Following the breath taking run by the artificial intelligence (AI)-related
stocks over the past year, some cooling-off in the short-term could not be
ruled out. Nonetheless, that does not dent the long-term prospects for AI,
and we believe the tech darlings would continue to fare well in the years
ahead.
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