Federal Reserve Will Be Forced To Implement Abrupt Rate Hike Reversal, Forecasts Macro Economic Expert

dailyhodlPublished on 2023-04-12Last updated on 2023-04-12

Abstract

A closely followed macroeconomist believes that the stage is set for the Federal Reserve to...

A closely followed macroeconomist believes that the stage is set for the Federal Reserve to start cutting interest rates sooner rather than later.
In a new video, Jeff Snider tells his 44,700 YouTube subscribers that the US economy is flashing signs of weakness and facing disruptions in the financial industry.

According to the macro expert, the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and Credit Suisse last month is just the beginning of the financial disruptions. He also mentions that the country’s labor market is starting to show signs of slowing down after payrolls grew by 236,000 in March, which is significantly less than the 472,000 jobs created in January.
Snider says that current macro conditions will likely force the Federal Reserve to shift its focus from fighting inflation to rescuing the economy from witnessing a full-blown recession.
“The more we get of economic weakness, the more prospects for financial dysfunction. We do get a quick swing in the Fed reaction function so that rate cuts, they begin relatively soon and they can come fast and furious, which by the way, is exactly what the way our markets are pricing… 
Markets are pricing for a quick shift to rate cuts, and then a rapid series of them once they happen. This is not at all out of line with economic and Federal Reserve history. In fact, it is perfectly in line with Federal Reserve history because, in that history, the Fed usually follows the markets and the economy, not the other way around.” 
The macroeconomist recently told his 103,600 Twitter followers that the Fed has a tendency to say that it has no intention of cutting rates only to swiftly pivot “once reality hits.” Snider gave multiple examples including the Fed’s reaction in 2001 when the country saw the dot-com recession.
“In 2000, FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) refused to consider anything but a labor shortage and inflation risks. Beginning Jan ’01, more weakness plus stock bust unleashed furious rate cuts just weeks before policymakers said were unthinkable.” 

Image

Source: Jeff Snider/Twitter In addition to concerning macroeconomic data, Snider highlights that a number of central banks including the Reserve Bank of India, the Reserve Bank of Australia and the Bank of Canada have already hit pause on their rate hike campaigns,
“All the pieces are falling into place. And among those pieces, one of the last pieces is several central banks are already in the pause phase with I gotta believe, the Federal Reserve is not far behind… The days of rate hikes are incredibly numbered.” 

Related Reads

DeFi Hacked Again for $292 Million, Is Even Aave No Longer Safe?

On April 19, a major DeFi security breach occurred, resulting in the loss of approximately $292 million. The attack targeted Kelp DAO’s rsETH bridge contract built on LayerZero, with 116,500 rsETH stolen. The attacker initiated the exploit using funds from Tornado Cash and manipulated the LayerZero EndpointV2 contract to transfer the assets. Kelp DAO confirmed the incident and temporarily paused rsETH contracts across multiple networks while collaborating with security experts for investigation. Initial analysis suggests the root cause was a compromised private key on the source chain, with the contract secured by only a 1/1 validator set, making it vulnerable to a single malicious transaction. The attacker used the stolen rsETH as collateral on lending platforms—including Aave, Compound, and Euler—to borrow more liquid assets like WETH, accumulating over $236 million in debt. Aave alone accounted for $196 million of this amount. In response, Aave froze its rsETH markets and stated it would explore covering potential bad debt through its Umbrella safety module, which holds around $50 million in WETH. This incident follows another large exploit earlier in April, where Drift Protocol on Solana lost $280 million. The repeated high-value attacks raise concerns about DeFi security, even affecting major protocols like Aave. Users are advised to exercise caution, diversify holdings, and limit exposure to on-chain protocols until more robust security measures are established.

marsbit24m ago

DeFi Hacked Again for $292 Million, Is Even Aave No Longer Safe?

marsbit24m ago

Trading

Spot
Futures
活动图片