
July rate cut from Fed is ‘now completely off the table’ following solid jobs report
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
July rate cut from Fed is ‘now completely off the table’ following solid jobs report
The odds of a rate cut at the Federal Reserve’s next meeting fell near 5% from nearly 25%. The jobs report for June alleviated concerns about a slowing US economy. President Trump has repeatedly pressured the Fed to stop waiting and start cutting again. The White House’s case for looser monetary policy is “a tough sell,” one analyst said. But Fed watchers expect the White House pressure campaign to continue.. The odds of the Fed cutting in July have fallen to near 5%, according to the CME FedWatch tool. The chances of a cut in July are now near 5%.
“You are not getting a July rate cut — that is now completely off the table,” Joe Brusuelas, RSM chief economist, told Yahoo Finance.
Traders agree with that assessment. On Thursday morning, the odds of a cut at the Fed’s July 28-29 meeting fell near 5% from nearly 25%, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
“The markets are speaking,” Interactive Brokers chief strategist Steve Sosnick added. He told Yahoo Finance the likelihood of a Fed cut was “evaporating” in the aftermath of the latest labor market report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
The report showed the US economy added 147,000 nonfarm payrolls in June, more than the 106,000 expected by economists. The unemployment rate unexpectedly fell to 4.1%. Economists had expected the unemployment rate to move higher to 4.3%.
Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has cited a resilient economy as he argues for a patient approach to rate cuts. The strength of the US economy, he has said, gives the Fed time to assess whether President Trump’s tariffs will, in fact, push inflation higher over the summer.
Brusuelas of RSM said the jobs report “is feeding right into what Jerome Powell said,” namely that the economy is “not in trouble right now.”
Trump has repeatedly pressured Powell to stop waiting and start cutting again, making that case again this week.
The case for looser monetary policy being made by the White House is “a tough sell,” Sosnick said. “‘The economy is great but we need rate cuts at the same time.’ That’s cognitive dissonance.'”
Read more: How much control does the president have over the Fed and interest rates?
But Fed watchers expect the White House pressure campaign to continue. Brusuelas noted that the criticism is now being aimed not just at the Fed but at the entire Fed board.
Trump said Powell “should resign immediately” in a Truth Social post Wednesday night. On Monday, he posted a note he sent to Powell telling the Fed chair, “Jerome—You are, as usual, ‘Too Late,'” and arguing that he has “cost the USA a fortune.”
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks with Fed governor Michelle Bowman on June 25. (Saul Loeb/AFP via Getty Images) · SAUL LOEB via Getty Images
Trump on Truth Social also widened his criticism to the entire Fed board: “The Board just sits there and watches, so they are equally to blame.”
Fed governors Christoper Waller and Michelle Bowman have both made a case for rate cuts in July since the last Fed meeting, arguing that any inflation from tariffs will not linger.