The most highly anticipated central bankers' gathering of 2024 and quite possibly the most “pivotal moment” in monetary-policy history is finally here – as policymakers from around the world meet at the Federal Reserve’s Annual Jackson Hole Economic Symposium.

Dubbed the Davos for central bankers, the Fed’s Annual Jackson Hole Economic Symposium, brings together the world's top macroeconomists to influence future policy around Interest Rates, Inflation and Global Economic Growth – all of which has enormous potential to move the markets significantly.

Last year, central bankers in advanced economies used the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium as a platform to relay the message that significant progress had been made in battling inflation, but they were nowhere near ready to declare victory over inflation just yet.

This year however, the tone will be different. Officials at the European Central Bank and Bank of England have already cut rates this year. The Federal Reserve is now increasingly likely to join them – by delivering their first interest rate cut next month.

The big question now is: How many rate cuts will the Fed deliver this year?

The answer to this question may come from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech on Friday, which is expected to lay the groundwork for the long-awaited pivot and provide insight on the path of future monetary policy.

A much weaker-than-expected U.S jobs report earlier this month sparked fears of a recession, which drove traders to crank up their bets that the Fed could cut interest rates more aggressively than previously thought.

With a September rate cut all but assured, the debate is shifting to what the easing cycle will look like. The Fed’s latest Summary of Economic Projections, released at the conclusion of the FOMC meeting in June, implies a quarter-point cut per quarter through the end of 2026.

However, according to analysts at GSC Commodity Intelligence – “traders are pricing in a more aggressive, front-loaded easing cycle – with odds of a full percentage point of cuts before the end of 2024, followed by another percentage point of cuts in 2025”.

It would be a fair assessment to say that the path of the rate-cut cycle will depend on why the Fed is cutting. Will it lower interest rates to rescue the economy from a recession, or merely normalize rates that have grown too restrictive?

Only time will tell, however one thing we do know for certain is that if the Fed eases insufficiently in this cycle, the economy could tip into a recession. On the flipside, if the Fed cuts rates too quickly, it could reignite inflation.

Extraordinary times create extraordinary opportunities and right now, these markets are a trader's paradise. Regardless of the outcome, the Fed's Jackson Hole Economic Symposium is guaranteed to be a license to print money, which traders will not want to miss out on!

Where are prices heading next? Watch The Commodity Report now, for my latest price forecasts and predictions:

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