Skip to Main Content

Key Central Bank Policy Rates Approach Cyclical Peak

David Kautter Associate Investment Director

Over the past two weeks, central banks in the United States, United Kingdom, euro area, and Japan have all held monetary policy meetings. The communications following these meetings retained a hawkish bias, suggesting further policy tightening may be necessary—except for the Bank of Japan (BOJ)—however, additional interest rate hikes will likely be much less frequent for the remainder of this cycle. Despite this reality, we do not think major central banks will be quick to cut interest rates next year.

  • The Federal Reserve held its policy rate constant at 5.25%–5.50% but indicated in its summary of economic projections that interest rates would need to be held tighter relative to its last projection in June. For instance, the Fed now believes it will only cut interest rates by 50 basis points (bps) in 2024, relative to its prior projection of 100 bps in cuts, due to a stronger outlook for economic growth.
  • The Bank of England held its benchmark policy rate unchanged (5.25%) for the first time in nearly two years in a finely balanced decision. The lower-than-anticipated inflation print for August, along with weak PMI and GDP reports, gave the central bank cover to pause rate hikes as those increases already delivered appear to be having a material impact on the UK economy.
  • The European Central Bank increased its benchmark deposit rate 25 bps to 4.00%, its highest levels since the euro was created in 1999. However, the central bank cut its economic growth outlook and hinted that it is prepared to halt further rate increases with growth in the region seemingly on shaky foundations.
  • The BOJ continued to stand apart from its peers, making no changes to its ultra-loose monetary policy and continuing to hold its benchmark rate at -0.1%—the only country in the world to maintain a negative target rate. BOJ Governor Kazuo Ueda noted that the central bank must “patiently maintain” this dovish stance until inflation sustainably reaches their 2% target, which they have yet to see.

The GBP, EUR, and JPY all sold off vis-à-vis the USD as the market priced in a slightly stronger economic and interest rate backdrop in the United States. Equity markets broadly retreated as investors reacted negatively to the announcements. Looking forward, we do not think investors should be short duration relative to their benchmarks, given the support it can provide to portfolios if economic activity slows more than expected. We believe the risks to high-quality government bonds are tilted toward yields moving lower over the next 12 months.

 


David Kautter
Associate Investment Director, Capital Markets Research

Thomas O’Mahony
Senior Investment Director, Capital Markets Research

Last Updated:

This website is directed and intended to be accessed by persons who satisfy any of the following criteria:

  1. A professional client or an eligible counterparty*
  2. A financial advisor or financial intermediary acting on behalf of a professional client or eligible counterparty*
  3. An employee or prospective employee

If you satisfy any of these criteria, please click confirm to proceed:

Please check this box to remember my choice

*As defined in the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (Directive 2014/65/EC) as amended or updated (MiFID)

This website is directed and intended to be accessed by persons who satisfy any of the following criteria:

  1. A regulated financial entity*
  2. An institutional investor, investment professional and other entities or individuals who are qualified to operate in financial markets involving regulated financial activity as defined by its local country regulator
  3. An employee or prospective employee

If you satisfy any of these criteria, please click confirm to proceed:

Please check this box to remember my choice

*An entity regulated by its local country regulator which may include banks, collective investment schemes, endowments, foundations, investment managers, insurance companies, pension funds and intermediaries

The information contained herein is not suitable for retail investors.

Please contact us if you have any questions: ContactCA@cambridgeassociates.com

If you clicked decline in error, please click here