The Fed forecasts lowering rates by another half point before the year is out

    https://www.cnbc.com/2024/09/18/the-fed-forecasts-lowering-rates-by-another-half-point-before-the-year-is-out.html

    Posted by GringottsWizardBank

    18 Comments

    1. chewbaccashotlast on

      Jpow surprised me with the 50bp cut. I thought for sure it would be 25 and then a more accelerated plan to issue more.

      To me that signals smoke. And where there’s smoke there is fire.

      The challenge is you don’t know how much higher the market will go until it ploots down like an SOB.

      Remember 2022? When every stock known to mankind would drop 15-20% during one of their earnings? Imagine investing in stocks merely 2 years ago – NVDA and META most notably (I’m intentionally ignoring MANY huge smaller cap winners).

      Right now every stock worth its salt is not terribly far from ATHs. NVDA still has a bit to go and I don’t count TSLA because how can you price a car company that makes money from energy credits they sell to other car companies and their CEO is….well….

      People will say pull out all of your money. Others will say bulls will rejoice for the remainder of this year and into next.

      One thing is for certain – I’ve been playing QQQ puts almost daily never holding overnight. The few times I said I wouldn’t do it that MFer drops like 2-3% that day. So as long as I continue to play QQQ puts bulls have me to thank lmfao

    2. I don’t think people realize how many bonds are going to mature in 2025 and that the lower the prime rate when those bonds have to be re-sold the cheaper it will be to service that debt. Like for most of 2015 the 10 year Treasury notes were going for between 2 and 2.5%. Now the ten year yield is 3.7%. That represents a 40-80% increase in yield as things stand now on the same level of debt.

      So there is all this old debt getting refinanced, so to speak, and then probably $2T in new debt, $5-10t total in debt getting a new rate next year, the bond yield and therefore the prime rate being as low as possible is crucial. Probably of greater long term importance to the country than if we enter a recession or not.

      Then there are also corporate junk bonds. Even large cap companies don’t have the same resources to rack up debt like the US government. We are addicted to near zero rate and now that inflation has cooled the Fed is gonna try to get back to near zero asap.

    3. Another angle might be that the Fed is sucking up to the new government to get their support (keep their jobs)

    4. A full point drop after it’s been high and steady for so long is pretty concerning. It reflects a lack of faith in the economy and they’re doing this to entice borrowing again. 

      But this is a casino, so calls it is

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