Fed now 'skewed' more toward a dovish stance on rates

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While stocks (^DJI, ^IXIC, ^GSPC) are ultimately having a good day following the Federal Reserve's decision to hold interest rates, Treasury yields (^TYX, ^TNX, ^FVX) remain mixed. Harris Associates Co-Head of Fixed Income Adam Abbas sits down with Yahoo Finance in-studio to comment on how far the Fed still is from accomplishing its chief inflation goal despite all the good news, highlighting volatility in the bond market.

"My expectation over the next 12 months is as we get closer and closer to the actual cut cycle and we can really lock in on inflation, it is going to come down and stay down and that the labor market is okay," Abbas says. "It's going to be somewhere between 3.8%, 4.25%, but there is no big spike in unemployment. Then the treasury volatility will be lower and more range-bound as we just have more visibility and confidence... in the outcomes here. That's good for all markets."

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 Luke Carberry Mogan.

Video Transcript

JOSH LIPTON: As stocks closed at records, Treasury yields pulled back after the Fed decision and Fed Chair Jerome Powell reiterated the outlook of three rate cuts this year. Joining us now is Adam Abbas, Harris Associates co-head of fixed income and portfolio manager. Adam, it's good to see you.

ADAM ABBAS: Good to see you.

JOSH LIPTON: So listen, you heard us talking Adam, it is risk on-- right now we've got a record close for the Dow, the S&P and the NASDAQ. So investors clearly like what they heard. But what did you make of what the Fed did and said today?

ADAM ABBAS: Well, I think Jerome did a really good job today. I think there was a tendency. There was a risk really that he would come in and speak a lot about the last two inflation prints, the hotness, maybe even pivot hawkishly from a really dovish meeting in December. And in the risk there is that we just have a Fed that's flip flopping. You lose credibility and what he said. And I think he said correctly was, we had two data points.

Some of that was seasonal. We're going to wait for more data points to confirm a trend. And he gave us evidence that the labor market can be strong as well. And that there's no reason to change estimates. You saw the dot plot still had three cuts. And I think all of that was appropriate. I think he did hedge with a little-- we are data dependent if inflation were to remain sticky, we would make some changes.

If the labor market started to break down, we saw a tick up to 3.9%, we would make some changes. But importantly, he really didn't change his forecast and he reiterated to the marketplace, why? And I think that was a great job by him.