Everyday Economics: Fed decision week: Housing, retail, and rate cut reality

This week brings critical updates on retail sales and homebuilding activity that could reshape market expectations before the Fed’s pivotal rate decision.

Housing Market Headwinds Pushed Many Builders To The Sidelines

Housing permits have declined year-over-year. The weakness reflects more sluggish home sales than previously expected and rising construction costs. Builders report that high material prices and labor shortages continue to challenge their ability to build homes that meet budget constraints of many families. The tailwind? Mortgage rates have declined approximately 25 basis points over the past month, providing some relief to prospective buyers. This decline in mortgage rates could lower the cost of rate buy downs but isn’t likely by itself to get builders to start new projects in the near term.

Retail Sales: The Market-Moving Wild Card

Retail sales data will likely move markets significantly this week. The prevailing theory suggests rising prices from tariffs will constrain consumer spending, supporting the case for immediate Fed action. However, if retail volumes surprise to the upside, Treasury yields could jump ahead of the Fed decision.

- Advertisement -

Fed Decision: The Main Event

The labor market has been cooling while inflation has been moving higher, creating the Fed’s classic dual mandate tension. Markets have overlooked inflation data somewhat, pricing in two rate cuts this year and an additional easing in 2026. This forward-looking behavior has already loosened financial conditions – the benchmark 10-year Treasury yield fell roughly 17 basis points in the past 30 days while 30-year fixed mortgage rates declined about 25 basis points. Stock markets have continued rising, further easing financial conditions well before any Fed action.

The Market Expectations Trap

This creates a critical dynamic: should the Fed fail to deliver on the rate path already priced in, a sharp reversal could occur. Treasury yields and mortgage rates could rise while stocks could decline as investors recalibrate expectations.

What are the odds of five or six rate cuts over the next 12 months? That depends on the future path of the economy, labor market and inflation. While the labor market slowdown appears severe enough to justify lower rates despite current inflation readings, upcoming fiscal stimulus could prolong the path to the Fed terminal rate implied by market expectations.

The Neutral Rate Reality

- Advertisement -

The neutral rate of interest represents the short-term interest rate that would prevail when the economy operates at full employment with stable inflation. This rate is determined by underlying forces of aggregate savings and investment demand, influenced by factors including productivity growth, labor force demographics, and global safe asset demand and supply.

Several structural factors are pushing the neutral rate lower:

Labor force growth is slowing, reducing investment demand as fewer workers require less capital

However, other forces could keep rates elevated:

Productivity growth from technologies like AI could increase investment opportunities and capital demand.Persistently higher fiscal deficits will increase the supply of government debt, potentially exceeding demand for safe assets, lifting term premia. Big deficits can lift the neutral rate by lowering national savings and lift long‑term yields by raising the term premium.An aging population could lead to lower savings as retirees spend down accumulated wealth

Bottom Line: Expectations vs. Reality

The Fed and financial markets estimate the real neutral rate between 0.75% and 1%. While the FOMC did not expect to reach this level before 2027, markets believe we’ll arrive earlier. This seems unlikely if inflation takes longer than expected to return to the Fed’s 2% target, especially if fiscal stimulus provides additional economic support.

The risk for markets lies in the gap between expectations and reality. If the Fed proves more cautious than markets anticipate, the recent easing in financial conditions could reverse quickly, creating volatility across asset classes.

spot_img
spot_img

Hot this week

Health care company agrees to pay $22.5 million to settle claims of over billing

A health care company agreed to pay nearly $22.5...

African and Caribbean Nations Call for Reparations for Slave Trade, Propose Global Fund

Nations across Africa and the Caribbean, deeply impacted by...

Sports betting expert offers advice on paying taxes for gambling winnings

(The Center Square) – Tax season is underway, and...

Business association ‘disappointed’ by WA L&I’s proposed workers comp rate hike

(The Center Square) – The Association of Washington Business...

Sports betting bill still alive in Georgia House

(The Center Square) – A bill that would allow...

Indian reservation focus of human smuggling probe at U.S.-Canada border

(The Center Square) – An Indian reservation that spans...

Department of State issues guidance on upcoming election

(The Center Square) - Secretary of the Commonwealth Al...

Muslims in Virginia, New York face decades in prison for supporting Houthis, ISIS

Two cases in Virginia and New York highlight ongoing...

Duffy: We are going to go after the CDL mills

(The Center Square) – Safety concerns, two triple-fatals involving...

‘Temporary band-aid:’ USDA able to cover 50% of November SNAP benefits

(The Center Square) – Despite previously denying it had...

Ranked-choice vote to decide crowded Minneapolis mayoral election

(The Center Square) – On Election Day, 15 different...

Billions in local bonds, tax hikes on Michiganders’ ballots

(The Center Square) – As Michigan voters prepare for...

More like this
Related

Indian reservation focus of human smuggling probe at U.S.-Canada border

(The Center Square) – An Indian reservation that spans...

Department of State issues guidance on upcoming election

(The Center Square) - Secretary of the Commonwealth Al...

Muslims in Virginia, New York face decades in prison for supporting Houthis, ISIS

Two cases in Virginia and New York highlight ongoing...