Morgan Stanley Sticks With June Rate Cut Call as Oil Surges

Morgan Stanley is sticking with a forecast that sees the Federal Reserve resuming interest rates cuts in June and delivering another reduction in September, even as soaring oil prices prompt traders to curb bets for how much policymakers will lower borrowing costs this year.

“We’re still on June and September, with the risk that of course it gets delayed,” Michael Gapen, chief US economist at Morgan Stanley told Bloomberg News in a roundtable discussion in New York on Monday.

The forecast is at odds with a market that has rushed to price out rate cuts, as spiking oil prices in the wake of the Iran war threaten to revive inflation and potentially hinder the Fed’s ability to ease monetary policy.

Futures tied to Fed policy rates currently price one quarter-point cut in December, down from at least 50 basis points seen as recently as last month. September odds for a quarter-point cut stand around 60%. Economists at both TD Securities and Barclays last week shifted their forecasts for the next Fed cut to September from June.

Meanwhile, a bout of heavy selling in Treasuries last week took the policy-sensitive two-year yield as high as nearly 3.75%, putting it above the rate paid on reserves by the Fed — a level that is rarely broken. A market proxy for where the Fed will complete its current easing cycle, known as the terminal rate, has risen some 50 basis points from late February to above 3.4%.

“I was a little surprised that the two-year moved as much as it did, I could certainly see maybe longer rates moving, but I am surprised again that the terminal rate has been repriced as high as it has been,” said Gapen.

BB market pricing

A sharp jump in the rolling-one-month volatility for the two-year note over the past week reflects the unwinding of options positions as front-end yields sold off, the bank said in a note published Monday.