UBS expects no Fed easing this year; sees hawkish tone in June meeting

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
UBS expects no Fed easing this year; sees hawkish tone in June meeting teaser image

June 16 (Reuters) - UBS Global Wealth Management pushed back its timeline for U.S. Federal Reserve rate cuts to March and June 2027 and ​no longer expects any easing this year, citing expectations of ‌a hawkish tone at this week’s policy meeting.

The wealth manager expects 25 basis point (bp) reductions each in March and June next year, compared to their ​previous forecasts of cuts in December 2026 and March ​2027.

The Fed's policy decision is due on Wednesday—the first under ⁠new chair Kevin Warsh and policymakers are widely expected to keep rates ​steady.

"Despite the new Fed chair's previously stated more dovish views, we ​expect a more hawkish tone to the Fed’s meeting, both in the central bank’s statement and in the dot plot," analysts at UBS Global Wealth Management said ​in a note dated June 15.

The Fed meeting also follows U.S. President ​Donald Trump's announcement on Monday that the United States and Iran had reached a preliminary agreement ‌to ⁠end their conflict, which has brought some relief to global financial markets.

"Leading central banks will avoid making a hasty pivot back toward more dovish language in response to the US-Iran deal," UBS said, with a ​string of central ​bank meetings slated ⁠this week, including the Bank of England.

"Instead, they (central banks) are likely to remain cautious as events ​unfold and as incoming data over the coming months ​reveals ⁠whether the energy shock is triggering second round inflation shocks."

Major global brokerages expect no Fed easing this year, with Citigroup and Wells Fargo being ⁠outliers.

Traders are ​betting on a roughly 42% probability ​for the Fed to hike rates by 25 bps in December this year, according ​to the CME FedWatch tool.

Reporting by Kanishka Ajmera in Bengaluru; Editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar

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