WASHINGTON (AP) – American consumers and home buyers, business people and political leaders have been waiting for months for what the Federal Reserve is poised to announce this week: That it’s cutting its key interest rate from a two-decade peak.
It’s likely to be just the first in a series of rate cuts that should make borrowing more affordable now that the Fed has deemed high inflation to be all but defeated.
Consider Kelly Mardis, who owns Marcel Painting in Tempe, Arizona. About a quarter of Mardis’ business comes from real estate agents who are prepping homes for sale or from new home buyers. Customer queries, he recalls, quickly dropped almost as soon as the Fed started jacking up interest rates in March 2022 – and then kept raising rates through July 2023.
As the housing market contracted, Mardis had to lay off about half his staff of 30. It was the worst dry spell he had experienced in 14 years.
After the Fed begins cutting rates Wednesday, Mardis envisions brighter times ahead. Typically, a succession of Fed rate cuts leads over time to lower borrowing costs for things like mortgages, auto loans, credit cards and business loans.
“I’m 100 percent sure it would make a difference,” Mardis said. “I’m looking forward to it.”
At the same time, plenty of uncertainty still surrounds this week’s Fed meeting.
How much will the policymakers decide to reduce their benchmark rate, now at 5.3 percent? By a traditional quarter-point or by an unusually large half-point?
Will they keep loosening credit at their subsequent meetings in November and December and into 2025? Will lower borrowing costs take effect in time to bolster an economy that is still growing at a solid pace but is clearly showing cracks?
Chair Jerome Powell emphasized in a speech last month in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, the Fed is prepared to cut rates to support the job market and achieve a notoriously difficult “soft landing.” That is when the central bank manages to curb inflation without tipping the economy into a steep recession and causing unemployment to surge.
It’s not entirely clear the Fed can pull it off.
One hopeful sign is that as Powell and other Fed officials have signaled that rate cuts are coming, many interest rates have already fallen in anticipation. The average 30-year mortgage rate dropped to 6.2 percent last week – the lowest level in about 18 months and down from a peak of nearly 7.8 percent, according to the mortgage giant Freddie Mac. Other rates, like the yield on the five-year Treasury note, which influences auto loan rates, have also tumbled.
“That really does help lower those borrowing costs across the board,” said Kathy Bostjancic, chief economist at Nationwide Financial. “That helps to give nice relief to consumers.”
Businesses can now borrow at lower rates than they’ve been able to for the past year or so, potentially boosting their investment spending.
“The question is if it’s helping quickly enough … to actually deliver the soft landing that everyone’s been hoping for,” said Gennadiy Goldberg, head of U.S. rates strategy at TD Securities.
Many economists would like to see the Fed announce a half-point rate cut this week, in part because they think the officials should have begun cutting rates at their previous meeting in July. Wall Street traders on Friday signaled their expectation that the Fed will carry out at least two half-point cuts by year’s end, according to futures prices.
Yet Goldberg suggested there would be downsides to implementing a half-point rate cut this week. It might signal to the markets that the Fed’s policymakers are more worried about the economy than they actually are.
“Markets could assume that something is wrong and the Fed sees something quite terrible on the horizon,” Goldberg said.
In the long run, more important than Wednesday’s Fed action is the pace of rate cuts through next year and the ultimate end point. If Fed officials conclude inflation is essentially defeated and they no longer need to slow the economy, that would suggest that their key rate should be at a more “neutral” setting, which could be as low as 3 percent. That would require a series of further rate cuts.
Many economists think the economy needs much lower rates. Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG, notes hiring has averaged just 116,000 a month for the past three months, a level equivalent to the sluggish job growth coming out of the 2008-09 Great Recession. The unemployment rate has risen by nearly a full percentage point to 4.2 percent.
FILE - A screen displays a news conference with Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, May 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)
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