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FRONT PAGE / MARKETS / MKT-2026-05-12-F2
MARKETS · rates central banks · 2026-05-12SCOOP 55

BofA and Goldman push back Fed easing forecasts amid inflation risks

Economic Times reported on May 12 that major Wall Street brokerages have delayed their expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts, as high energy prices and a strong labour market keep inflation concerns elevated.

·FILED 2026-05-12·1 MIN READ·RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02 UTC·✓ RE-VERIFIED 2026-07-02

At a glance

  • BofA expects no Fed rate cuts in 2026 and sees easing only in mid-2027
  • Goldman Sachs moved its expected first rate cut from September to December 2026
  • High energy prices and a strong labour market are keeping inflation concerns elevated

VERDICT — CONFIRMED

pipeline-backfill confidence · primary + corroborating sources verified · re-verified 2026-07-02 UTC
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Major Wall Street brokerages have pushed back their expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts, Economic Times reported on May 12, as high energy prices and a strong labour market keep inflation concerns elevated.

Bank of America now expects no cuts at all in 2026, forecasting easing only in mid-2027, per the report. Goldman Sachs moved its expected start of rate cuts from September to December 2026.

The two revisions point the same direction but differ in severity: Goldman's shift is a one-quarter delay within 2026, while BofA's removes this year's easing entirely and pushes the first cut more than a year out.

The forecasts are the brokerages' own projections as relayed by Economic Times, not Federal Reserve guidance. The underlying research notes, and any accompanying terminal-rate or inflation forecasts, were not included in the material reviewed. Forecast revisions of this kind are routinely updated as data arrives.

Key facts on file

  • BofA expects no Fed rate cuts in 2026 and sees easing only in mid-2027
  • Goldman Sachs moved its expected first rate cut from September to December 2026
  • High energy prices and a strong labour market are keeping inflation concerns elevated

PRIMARY SOURCE

Economic Times — Markets
— (2026-05-12) · fetched at filing · archived at publication
Filed underINFLATIONMARKET

Sources · two-source rule

PRIMARYEconomic Times — Markets— (2026-05-12)
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Filed by the Markets desk · verified by the verification desk · re-verified 2026-07-02 · Our standards: the two-source rule ›
CITE THIS FILE — The Dossier Wire · mkt-2026-05-12-f2 · filed 2026-05-12 · https://thedwire.com/wire/mkt-2026-05-12-f2-bofa-and-goldman-push-back-fed-easing-forecasts-amid.html · Primary and corroborating sources listed above; archived at publication. Republishing & licensing: hello@thedwire.com.
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MARKETS · SCOOP 55

RBA warns of harsh Iran war reality as oil prices leave Australians 'feeling poorer'

ABC Australia reported on May 5 that Australia's pre-existing inflation problem has turned sinister since the Iran war, with the economy now hostage to oil prices. The Reserve Bank governor was quoted saying "We are all feeling poorer" as the central bank warned of the war's harsh economic reality for interest rates.

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