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Goldman Pushes Fed Rate-Cut Call to 2027 on Jobs Data

June 8 (Reuters) - Goldman Sachs expects the U.S. Federal Reserve to keep rates unchanged through 2026 and delay rate cuts until 2027, it ​said on Friday, citing stronger economic activity and job growth ‌after a robust payrolls report.

The brokerage now expects rate cuts in June and December 2027, instead of the 25-basis-point reductions it had forecast for December ​2026 and March 2027.

The change followed a stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report, ​which pointed to renewed labor market strength and gave ⁠the Federal Reserve more room to keep rates steady despite inflationary ​pressures from the Middle East conflict.

Goldman joins a growing number of ​firms expecting a prolonged pause, with Nomura also forecasting last month that the Fed would remain on hold through 2026.

"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.

Reporting by Kanishka Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by Nivedita Bhattacharjee

Source: Reuters


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