Goldman Sachs pushes Fed rate-cut call to 2027 on strong US jobs data
Goldman Sachs now anticipates the U.S. Federal Reserve will maintain current interest rates through 2026, delaying any rate cuts until 2027. This shift, driven by robust economic and job growth, suggests a prolonged pause by the central bank. The...

"The resilient activity and employment data also lower the bar for a rate hike, less because they suggest a risk of overheating than because a stronger starting point for the economy reduces the risk that a hike could end up looking like a costly mistake," Goldman said in a note.
The brokerage added that while rate hikes remain unlikely, they are slightly more plausible than previously thought.
Goldman Sachs said it now sees the most likely path for the Fed as delaying rate cuts until the effects of tariffs, higher oil prices linked to the Iran conflict and other war-related pressures fade, and until year-over-year core PCE inflation moves closer to the 2% target, alongside a cooling in what it views as overstated AI-driven demand.
Traders expect the central bank to deliver rate hikes with a 75.5% probability by the end of the year, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
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