Billionaire hedge fund manager Paul Tudor Jones believes the Federal Reserve has finished raising interest rates in its fight against inflation, and the stock market could grind higher this year.
«I definitely think they are done,» Jones said on CNBC's "Squawk Box" of the Fed's rate-hiking campaign. «They could probably declare victory now because if you look at CPI, it's been declining 12 straight months… That's never happened before in history.»
The central bank has hiked interest rates 10 times since over a year ago, taking the fed funds rate to a target range of 5%-5.25%, the highest since August 2007. The consumer price index has cooled considerably since peaking out around 9% in June 2022. The gauge eased to 4.9% in April.
The longtime investor said the market setup right now is similar to mid-2006 before the Great Financial Crisis, where stocks ground higher for over a year after the Fed stopped tightening monetary policy.
«Equity prices… I think they're going to continue to go up this year,» Jones said. «I'm not rampantly bullish because I think it'll be a slow grind.»
Jones shot to fame after he predicted and profited from the 1987 stock market crash. He is also the chairman of nonprofit Just Capital, which ranks public U.S. companies based on social and environmental metrics.
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