The Federal Reserve will hold interest rates steady this month, but fresh inflation data has increased pressure for a cut sooner than previously expected, says the CEO of one of the worldโs largest independent financial advisory organisations.
Nigel Green of deVere Group comments: โThis CPI report gives the Fed exactly what itโs been looking for: clear evidence that inflation is cooling in line with its target.โ
โTheyโll stay on hold for now, but they wonโt be able to justify it for much longer. A cut this year is now not just likely, itโs looking increasingly necessary.โ
The May Consumer Price Index showed that core inflation rose by 0.2% month-on-month, with the year-on-year rate edging up slightly to 2.9% from 2.8%. While not a dramatic drop, the consistency of the 0.2% monthly figure is what carries weight with policymakers.
โThis is the second time in three months that weโve seen the core CPI line up with what the Fed considers acceptable monthly progress,โ he explains.
โMarkets and the central bank are focused on that monthly trend โ and this one points clearly in the right direction.โ
Despite the modest rise in the annualized figure, economists and investors alike are honing in on the monthly pace, which is generally viewed as a more accurate gauge of underlying inflation momentum.
โThe year-on-year rate can move for all sorts of reasons,โ he notes. โWhat the Fed really wants is reassurance that prices are no longer accelerating dramatically, and this report offers that.โ
As a result, rate expectations have shifted sharply.
โMarkets are now pricing in a much higher probability of a rate cut in September. Thatโs a clear change from just a few weeks ago, when some still feared no cut at all this year,โ says Nigel Green.
He continues: โThe Fed is stuck in a difficult position. It doesnโt want to move too early โ but if it waits too long, it risks doing unnecessary damage to the economy.โ
The combination of restrictive interest rates, slowing inflation, and increasing political pressure makes for a volatile mix heading into the second half of the year.
The deVere CEO also notes that other central banks are already moving.
โThe European Central Bank has already cut. Others are expected to follow. If the Fed falls too far behind, that will have major implications for the dollar, capital flows, and investor confidence.โ
For investors, he warns that the pace and timing of the Fedโs actions could significantly impact asset allocation strategies over the next six months.
โIf the Fed cuts too late, risk assets will struggle. If it signals a move too early, inflation expectations could reignite. The balancing act is extremely fine; but todayโs data gives the Fed a reason to begin preparing the market for action.โ
He concludes: โThis is the moment investors could look back on as the shift point. The Fedโs next move wonโt come today, but the countdown has begun. Cuts are coming and the timing may surprise some.”





