GREENWICH, Connecticut — Most investors still believe that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point at its meeting next month. But the Fed’s case for lowering rates by another 50 basis points by year end — which was what central bank policymakers had projected at their September meeting — is starting to look shakier. The September jobs report put to rest any immediate concerns about the labor market running out of gas. The collective hyperventilation over the Sahm Rule — which suggests the economy is facing a recession when the three-month average jobless rate increases by half a percentage point from its lowest level over the course of a year — feels like ancient history. “Two weeks ago, we were talking about the Sahm Rule,” Pablo Calderini, the president and CIO and Graham Capital Management, told a roomful of investors at the Delamar hotel on Wednesday during the annual Greenwich Economic Forum. “Now we’re talking about inflation.” The Consumer Price Index — out later this morning — is expected to show that prices climbed at an annual rate of 2.3 percent in September. The “core” CPI, which excludes food and energy, is expected to be around 3.2 percent. Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan said the Fed should proceed with rate cuts “gradually,” arguing that looser financial conditions and stronger-than-expected consumer spending could still cause inflation to climb. The minutes from the central bank’s September meeting, released yesterday afternoon, suggested that Fed Chair Jerome Powell had to sell certain policymakers on the need for last month’s hefty half-point cut, Victoria Guida reports. (Michelle Bowman was the first Fed governor to cast a dissenting vote in almost two decades). The economy’s underlying strength and the Fed’s latest messaging have started to resonate with investors. Michael de Pass, the global head of rates trading at Citadel Securities, told Bloomberg that he only sees rates falling by another quarter point between now and the end of the year. The likelihood that Powell will hold rates at the current range of 4.75 to 5.00 percent at the next meeting doubled between Tuesday and Wednesday, climbing to 21.2 percent around market close, according to CME’s FedWatch tool. Of course, there is a ton of economic data that will be released between tomorrow’s CPI report and the Fed’s Nov. 6-7 meeting that will weigh on the central bank’s decision — including the October report on the jobs market. Despite September’s blowout jobs number, employment in the manufacturing sector has been contracting for months. Anne Walsh, the CIO of Guggenheim Partners Investment Management, told the GEF crowd that while the overall economy has been resilient, there have been “rolling” recessions through interest rate-sensitive sectors like manufacturing and commercial real estate. Still, expectations that the Fed will move aggressively to lower borrowing costs have now faded. “I think they can cut rates a bit, but they can’t cut rates a lot,” Bridgewater Associates Founder Ray Dalio, speaking virtually from Singapore, told the audience at the GEF. IT’S THURSDAY — If you’ve got tips, let me know at ssutton@politico.com.
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