Policy outlook
The November CPI report, lacking any meaningful upside surprise, likely confirms a Fed policy cut next week. The positive development with owners’ equivalent rent, its monthly pace having fallen to the slowest rate since January 2021, is also likely to be a welcome development. However, with monthly core inflation still showing signs of stickiness, with overall monthly core inflation hitting its strongest rate since the inflation scare of early 2024 and its recent annualized run-rate notching a fourth straight monthly acceleration, price pressures are hardly settling at a level that the Fed can be completely at ease with. The Fed will be concerned by the very stubborn nature of inflation and will also be increasingly cautious about the upside inflation risks that President-elect Trump’s policies may bring. We expect the Fed to move off autopilot in January, adopting a more cautious tone, and slowing its pace of cuts to just every other meeting.