Deutsche Bank Compares AI Fears to "Peso Problem," Questions Rationality of Fed Rate Cut Expectations

Deep News
Mar 12

Deutsche Bank AG suggests that investors' expectations for Federal Reserve interest rate cuts may have surpassed levels consistent with economic fundamentals, as the artificial intelligence (AI) disruption they fear might not materialize at all. Strategists including Matthew Raskin noted in a Wednesday report that this situation resembles the classic "peso problem," where investors price in the risk of a highly improbable but significant future event.

The term "peso problem" originated in the 1970s, when markets persistently undervalued Mexican assets due to fears of a sudden peso devaluation. However, the devaluation did not occur for many years, making the risk premium appear irrational in hindsight. At the time, investors still had to guard against potential black swan events.

Deutsche Bank AG strategists believe that current concerns about AI potentially disrupting labor markets, leading to reduced corporate activity and job losses, are similarly influencing bond traders' expectations for Fed policy.

Although Middle East conflicts have driven up energy prices, prompting traders to scale back bets on the extent of rate cuts this year, they have still pushed expectations for monetary easing further out, to 2027.

Raskin stated that due to fears that AI could eventually cause widespread unemployment, these expectations may persist, largely unaffected by upcoming economic data releases.

"In the current environment, whether or not the market's expectation of AI causing a significant rise in unemployment is correct, there is an element of the peso problem here. We currently have little clarity on which short-term data or other developments might lead the market to conclude that 'the risk is not as high as currently perceived,'" Raskin and colleagues wrote. "This implies that even if economic data outperform expectations, rate cut expectations for the next year or beyond could remain entrenched."

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