Fed rate cuts to remain in view for 2024, even as rate-setters shift

By Ann Saphir

SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 22 (Reuters) - The annual rotation on the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest-rate-setting committee means its 2024 voting members lean slightly more hawkish than the outgoing group from 2023 – but that won’t budge the outlook for a pivot to interest-rate cuts next year.

In fact, plenty of analysts make the opposite argument: if inflation continues to fall more quickly than expected, Fed policymakers will want to reduce rates even more than the three-quarters-of-a-percentage point implied in fresh projections published last week.

An important test comes on Friday, with the release of November's personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed's preferred measure of inflation. Economists currently expect it to be unchanged from the prior month, bringing the annualized rate over the past six months to within a couple tenths of the Fed's 2% target.

Over the second half of the year, the center of gravity at the Fed policymaking table has become markedly more dovish, as evidence accumulates that price pressures are easing and the labor market is cooling in the face of the Fed's rates hikes from March 2022 to July 2023.

In particular, those policymakers who had been most hawkish, including Fed Governor Christopher Waller, have backed away from their previous support for rate hikes.

"Everybody is a hawk when you are fighting inflation," said Deutsche Bank's Brett Ryan. "As the upside risks to inflation have diminished, they have changed their view."

After central bankers held rates steady at 5.25%-5.50% last week, Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted that the timing of rate cuts would be the Fed's "next question," sending bond yields plummeting and markets pricing in rapid-fire policy rate reductions starting in March.

But even if cuts come later and more gradually than that, as policymakers have since tried to signal, the direction of those bets tracks the Fed leader's changed tone.

"Powell is not stupid," said SGH Macro Advisors' Tim Duy. "If he set expectations for more than 75 basis points of rate cuts, he did it for a reason."

One reason, Duy explains, is this: As lower inflation filters through the economy, firms that this year were able to raise prices will find it more difficult to do so next year, and may need to turn to trimming labor costs to protect their profits. Signaling easier policy ahead is a bid to head off those kinds of "nasty" disinflationary dynamics, he says.

There is also another rationale for rate cuts next year: As inflation falls, holding the benchmark rate steady drives real borrowing costs up, so the Fed must dial back its policy rate to prevent overtightening.