The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting on 28 January is attracting considerable attention. After cutting rates at each of the last three meetings, Federal Reserve officials have signalled that further easing is unlikely in the near term. Recent data have reinforced that message. Inflation remains above the Fed’s 2% target, while labour market indicators have softened only gradually. The December jobs report showed slower hiring but a lower unemployment rate, and initial jobless claims remain subdued. Together, these developments point to an economy that is cooling, but not deteriorating sharply.
Market commentary broadly reflects this assessment. Investors increasingly expect a pause lasting several months, with the first additional rate cut now priced for mid year. Fed officials have emphasised that policy remains restrictive, but not excessively so, and that further easing would require clearer evidence of weakening labour market conditions or sustained progress on inflation. In short, there is little sense of urgency around the January meeting.
There are two standard ways to assess what the Fed is likely to do. The first is to look directly at market pricing. The CME’s FOMC calculator currently assigns a 95% probability to no change in the policy rate at the January meeting, and a 5% probability to a 25 basis point cut (see Chart 1). This reflects a near consensus view that the bar for another cut has not yet been met.