Octavio Marenzi, CEO of Opimas, joins Yahoo Finance Live to dissect shifting rate cut expectations. He says "all eyes are on the Fed [Federal Reserve] and what they're going to do," but with March odds fading given recent data, "I don't think it's a very strong case for the Fed actually cutting rates at all in March."
However, Marenzi notes timing is secondary, as the Fed usually sticks to a direction "for an extended period of time" of 12-18 months once they move. Though geopolitical tensions loom, he doesn't believe they will "weigh into the Fed's decision" with the US economy largely "isolated" from those events. Still, he points to Gold (GC=F) as an attractive investment given those concerns.
For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live.
Editor's note: This article was written by Angel Smith
Video Transcript
- The S&P 500 is pushing higher today, after hitting all time highs last week. Even as chances of a March Fed rate they dropped, or Fed rate cut, I should say, they dropped to less than 50% according to the CME FedWatch tool. So as the debate on when the Fed will cut rates rages on, where can you invest to hedge your bets? To tell us more we've got here, live in living color, in studio, Octavio Marenzi, Optimus CEO. Great to see you in person after so, it's been a while.
OCTAVIO MARENZI: It's been a while, indeed.
- Indeed. So
OCTAVIO MARENZI: It's good to see that you're real people.
- I mean, you chose the best time, right? We've got all time highs for the S&P 500. I mean, if you're an investor looking at this market environment right now and have to also pair this with the rate cut probability as of right now, what should be going through your mind? What should be top of the docket for any of your portfolio strategy?
OCTAVIO MARENZI: Well, I think all eyes are really on the Fed right now, and what they're going to do. Not this next rate meeting of the FLMC, but the one that follows on in March. What are they going to do there. And I think the consensus for some time has been now they're going to cut 25 basis points or 50 basis points, and now that's starting to look less and less likely. So that's not a melt like a snow in the sunshine, and basically saying, where are we going to go now, what is the Fed going to do?
Now, I think if you look at the Fed and the data that they look at, and the markets, and where the economy stands, and where unemployment stands, you put all those things together, I don't think there's a very strong case for the Fed actually cutting rates at all in March. I think quite the opposite. They're just going to look at it and say, inflation is coming down slowly, it's more stubborn than we'd liked. The last core inflation reading was 3.9%.