Interest Rate Cuts Remain Likely in 2025

With tariff hikes and policy uncertainty causing waves of volatility to run through the markets in March, attention turned to the March 18-19 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. Investors were looking to see if the collective impacts would alter the Federal Reserve’s (Fed’s) path forward toward curbing inflation.

Based on the March meeting decision, which saw the federal funds rate target range hold steady at 4.25%-4.50% and the forecast for two rate cuts in 2025 remain in place, it appears the Fed is content to stay the course… for now.

“Just like for businesses and consumers, uncertainty continues to cloud the Fed's outlook. However, Fed Chair Jerome Powell managed to ease some of the market's fears by emphasizing that economic fundamentals, particularly the 'hard data,' remain strong,” said Raymond James Chief Investment Officer Larry Adam. “Powell also noted that recent inflationary pressures are expected to be ‘transitory,’ with the Fed projecting inflation to fall to 2% by 2027.”

Adam noted that his team anticipates the Fed will remain in easing mode and look to cut interest rates twice in 2025, in line with the Fed’s forecast.

The updated dot plot did reveal a shift from several Fed members, as four FOMC participants see no rate changes in 2025, up from just a single member in the December update. No changes were made to either the 2026 or 2027 projections, with two cuts expected in 2026 and one in 2027.

“As we noted after the December FOMC meeting, Fed officials were fine with extending the runway for achieving its two percent inflation target to 2027, rather than 2026,” said Raymond James Chief Economist Eugenio Alemán. “The latest Summary of Economic Projections confirmed our belief that the Fed is still OK with its December decision by keeping the two rate cuts it was expecting for 2025 unchanged.”