The Fed could be 100 basis points off track, PIMCO saysMore analysts have gone on record saying that the Fed seems to be ignoring the Taylor Rule, one of the most basic economic principles for fighting inflation:
The Taylor rule states that when inflation is higher than the target rate (which is 2%), the U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate should be higher still, and moving upward faster than inflation.
In fact, the Fed’s “policy rate is 75 to 100 basis points (bps) too accommodative,” meaning too low, according to PIMCO’s Tiffany Wilding. There are various Taylor rule formulations, and on all of them the Fed appears to be holding interest rates too low to prevent inflation (CPI is 3.8%, notably higher than the Fed's current interest rate, at 3.5%), she says:

There’s “a growing risk that policy will need to pivot … in 2027,”
she says. “Recent Fed communications suggest policymakers are increasingly sensitive to the risk that inflation remains above target.”
Mark Cabana and his team at Bank of America
said something similar last month and they were joined by Aditya Bhave and other colleagues at BofA this weekend. “Taylor Rule models suggest policy is about 100bp too easy, based on core PCE inflation,” they told clients in a note seen by
Fortune.
Deutsche Bank’s Matt Luzzetti calculated the Fed ought to be setting rates at up to 4.8%. “That is more than 100bps above the current level, given core PCE inflation of around 3.2%, an unemployment rate of 4.3%,” the bank said in an email.