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Goldman Sachs pushes back US Fed rate cut forecast after soft jobs data

By Thomson Reuters Jan 11, 2026 | 10:49 PM

Jan 12 (Reuters) – Goldman Sachs pushed back its forecast for U.S. Federal Reserve rate cuts ‍on Sunday, now expecting two 25-basis-point reductions in June and September 2026 instead of the previously anticipated moves in March and June.

The shift ‌follows softer non-farm payrolls ‌data and reflects signs of a gradually weakening labor market, alongside stronger-than-expected GDP growth and fading tariff impacts.

“After the ​latest payrolls report, we see the Fed waiting until ‍mid-year to cut ​as inflation falls toward target ​and the labor market finds its ‍footing,” said David Mericle, chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs.

Goldman now expects the Fed funds rate to end 2026 at 3-3.25%, ‍and has reduced its 12-month recession probability to 20% from 30%.

The brokerage said ‍the ‍revised timeline was driven ​by “meaningful progress on inflation ​that ⁠was masked by a one-time ‌boost from tariffs,” and a labor market that, while stabilizing, remains at risk of further softening.

(Reporting by Akriti Shah in Bengaluru; Editing by ⁠Janane Venkatraman)