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Alert: Professor Jeremy Siegel changes his mind. “The Fed should lower rates.”

Professor Siegel nailed the Covid inflation calls and has been extremely accurate since. He’s not a annual recession caller, so one must consider as a base case that we will enter into a recession shortly unless the Fed lowers rates and/or the Tariff issues are satisfactorily implemented soon.

Siegel’s Main Viewpoints on the Fed and Economy

  1. Interest Rates Should Be Cut:
    • Siegel strongly argues that the Federal Reserve should lower interest rates.
    • Economic indicators—especially long-term inflation expectations—do not justify keeping rates high.
    • He references the “5-year, 5-year forward inflation rate” (a Fed-watched metric), which is low and even falling, showing no inflation risk.
  2. Short-Term Inflation vs. Long-Term Stability:
    • Tariffs (the “Trump bump”) might cause short-term inflation, but long-term expectations remain stable or declining.
    • This is not the kind of inflation that should worry the Fed.
  3. Money Supply Is Too Low:
    • The M2 money supply is growing under 4%, below the healthy 5–6% range.
    • Without increased money and loan growth, the economy could slow down—cutting rates would help stimulate both.
  4. Fed Independence Under Threat:
    • Political pressure on the Fed is growing.
    • Siegel believes cutting rates would actually protect the Fed’s independence, by avoiding a recession that would otherwise lead to blame from politicians like Trump.
  5. Yield Curve & Mixed Signals:
    • The yield curve had previously been inverted (a classic recession signal), then flattened.
    • Based on the term structure, Siegel thinks the current Fed funds rate should be ~3.3%, not 4.3%.

💡 Final Thoughts

  • Key risks right now are economic slowdown and credit stagnation, not inflation.
  • Siegel believes the Fed should start cutting in May and continue into June.
  • He criticizes past Fed actions for enabling excessive fiscal spending, but insists that current conditions clearly call for easing.