Survey: Fed seen lifting rates one more time before cutting in 2024
U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell attends a press conference
Xinhua News Agency/Getty Images

The Federal Reserve’s aggressive and forceful measures to cool the most overheated economy in four decades may soon be coming to an end, according to the nation’s top economists.

More than half (or 53 percent) of experts polled for Bankrate’s First-Quarter Economic Indicator poll say the Fed’s key benchmark interest rate will peak in a target range of 5-5.25 percent, suggesting officials will likely only hike rates one more time.

But that doesn’t mean rate cuts are around the corner. More than four-fifths of economists (or 82 percent) say officials likely won’t begin cutting borrowing costs until 2024, even as the recent failure of the nation’s 16th largest bank risks worsening financial stability.

Both estimates are largely in line with fresh projections from officials in March. The Fed penciled in a 5-5.25 percent peak interest rate for 2023, after which officials see rates falling to 4.25-4.5 percent by the end of 2024.

The survey findings are notable because they suggest economists are still seeing eye-to-eye with policymakers on the U.S. central bank at a time when investors are starting to divulge. Market participants expect the Fed will lift rates one more time before turning around and reducing borrowing costs as soon as July, according to CME Group’s FedWatch.

Where borrowing costs end up has massive implications for consumers. Higher rates translate to more expensive mortgages, auto loans and credit cards, and they risk harming hiring and the economy. On the other hand, they make it an even more lucrative time to be a saver — who’ve already been seeing the highest savings yields in more than a decade thanks to the rapid run up in interest rates.

[sc code="block_quote" quote_text="For individuals and households, this argues even more loudly for making emergency savings a high priority. Fortunately, returns on savings including certificates of deposit are the highest in 15 years." source="Mark Hamrick, senior economic analyst at Bankrate" image="https://www.bankrate.com/2023/03/17104056/mark-hamrick.jpeg"]

Key takeaways:

Fed’s dilemma: How hot is inflation – really?

Nearly one-fifth (or 18 percent) of economists say the Fed will have to hike interest rates two more times — the second largest majority among respondents. Meanwhile, nearly an eighth (or 12 percent) say the Fed has three more rate hikes. Just 6 percent say the Fed is already done raising interest rates.