--- title: "Why does the market firmly believe that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 2027? Deutsche Bank: They are betting on AI causing a recession" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/278863224.md" description: "Deutsche Bank believes that the underlying logic behind the market's bet on Federal Reserve interest rate cuts is not economic data, but rather a latent fear of the large-scale impact of AI on the labor market. This is distorting bond pricing—despite current employment and inflation data being robust, rate cut expectations stubbornly extend to 2027, with investors effectively paying in advance for an \"AI disruption era\" that has yet to occur" datetime: "2026-03-12T08:26:39.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278863224.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/278863224.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278863224.md) --- > Supported Languages: [简体中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/278863224.md) | [繁體中文](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/278863224.md) # Why does the market firmly believe that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by 2027? Deutsche Bank: They are betting on AI causing a recession The market's bets on the Federal Reserve's interest rate cuts may not be based on economic realities, but rather stem from a collective wager on the disruptive future of artificial intelligence. Deutsche Bank's latest research points out that investors' current pricing of the Federal Reserve's rate cut magnitude has exceeded the level supported by the current economic fundamentals. This phenomenon is driven by the market's latent concerns about the large-scale impact of AI on the labor market—despite the fact that this risk has yet to materialize. Although the Middle East conflict has raised energy costs, causing some traders to narrow their bets on rate cuts this year, expectations for easing policies have still been pushed back to 2027. This situation has left a clear mark on the bond market: regardless of how economic data evolves, expectations for rate cuts remain stubbornly present, reflecting that market participants are pre-pricing for an uncertain "AI disruption era." ## "Peso Problem": Paying for a Risk That Has Not Occurred The strategist team at Deutsche Bank, led by Matthew Raskin, characterized the above phenomenon in their Wednesday report as a classic "peso problem." The so-called "peso problem" refers to the behavior of investors pricing a tail risk that has a very low probability but would have a severe impact if it were to occur. This concept originated in the 1970s: at that time, the market consistently priced Mexican assets at a discount because traders were always worried that the peso would suddenly depreciate significantly. However, the actual depreciation was long in coming, making this risk premium seem "irrational" in hindsight—yet at that time, investors had to assign some probability to this potential black swan event. Deutsche Bank strategists believe that today's concerns about AI's impact on the labor market are producing a similar effect in bond traders' expectations of Federal Reserve policy: **even when current data does not support significant easing, the market continues to extend rate cut expectations into the future.** ## **Expectations of AI Impact: The Underlying Narrative of Pricing Logic** Deutsche Bank's analysis reveals a structural expectation bias: **when market participants believe that AI may trigger large-scale layoffs, business failures, or even economic recession at some point in the future, this belief will continue to suppress interest rate expectations—regardless of the trends in short-term employment or inflation data.** **This means that the sensitivity of Federal Reserve rate cut expectations to macro data may have been artificially suppressed. Within this framework, even if the economy remains resilient, investors tend to maintain easing bets because they are always reserving insurance for a "future recession triggered by AI."** In the short term, the rise in energy costs due to the Middle East conflict has led some traders to temporarily reduce their expectations for rate cuts this year. However, this adjustment has not fundamentally changed the overall pricing structure of the market—expectations for easing are still pushed back to 2027. This phenomenon indicates that while geopolitical factors can marginally influence the timeline for rate cuts, the long-term easing expectations constructed by the AI narrative remain one of the dominant logics in market pricing. 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