Current:Home > MarketsFederal Reserve is set to cut interest rates again as post-election uncertainty grows -Secure Growth Solutions
Federal Reserve is set to cut interest rates again as post-election uncertainty grows
View
Date:2025-04-16 17:31:47
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve officials are poised Thursday to reduce their key interest rate for a second straight time, responding to a steady slowdown of the inflation pressures that exasperated many Americans and contributed to Donald Trump’s presidential election victory.
Yet the Fed’s future moves are now more uncertain in the aftermath of the election, given that Trump’s economic proposals have been widely flagged as potentially inflationary. His election has also raised the specter of meddling by the White House in the Fed’s policy decisions, with Trump having proclaimed that as president he should have a voice in the central bank’s interest rate decisions.
The Fed has long guarded its status as an independent institution able to make difficult decisions about borrowing rates, free from political interference. Yet during his previous term in the White House, Trump publicly attacked Chair Jerome Powell after the Fed raised rates to fight inflation, and he may do so again.
The economy is also clouding the picture by flashing conflicting signals, with growth solid but hiring weakening. Even so, consumer spending has been healthy, fueling concerns that there is no need for the Fed to reduce borrowing costs and that doing so might overstimulate the economy and even re-accelerate inflation.
Financial markets are throwing yet another curve at the Fed: Investors have sharply pushed up Treasury yields since the central bank cut rates in September. The result has been higher borrowing costs throughout the economy, thereby diminishing the benefit to consumers of the Fed’s half-point cut in its benchmark rate, which it announced after its September meeting.
The average U.S. 30-year mortgage rate, for example, fell over the summer as the Fed signaled that it would cut rates, only to rise again once the central bank actually cut its benchmark rate.
Broader interest rates have risen because investors are anticipating higher inflation, larger federal budget deficits, and faster economic growth under a President-elect Trump. In what Wall Street has called the “Trump trade,” stock prices also soared Wednesday and the value of bitcoin and the dollar surged. Trump had talked up cryptocurrencies during his campaign, and the dollar would likely benefit from higher rates and from the across-the-board increase in tariffs that Trump has proposed.
Trump’s plan to impose at least a 10% tariff on all imports, as well as significantly higher taxes on Chinese goods, and to carry out a mass deportation of undocumented immigrants would almost certainly boost inflation. This would make it less likely that the Fed would continue cutting its key rate. Annual inflation as measured by the central bank’s preferred gauge fell to 2.1% in September.
Economists at Goldman Sachs estimate that Trump’s proposed 10% tariff, as well as his proposed taxes on Chinese imports and autos from Mexico, could send inflation back up to about 2.75% to 3% by mid-2026.
Such an increase would likely upend the future rate cuts the Fed had signaled in September. At that meeting, when the policymakers cut their key rate by an outsize half-point to about 4.9%, the officials said they envisioned two quarter-point rate reductions later in the year — one on Thursday and one in December — and then four additional rate cuts in 2025.
But investors now foresee rate cuts next year as increasingly unlikely. The perceived probability of a rate cut at the Fed’s meeting in January of next year fell Wednesday to just 28%, down from 41% on Tuesday and from nearly 70% a month ago, according to futures prices monitored by CME FedWatch.
The jump in borrowing costs for things like mortgages and car loans, even as the Fed is reducing its benchmark rate, has set up a potential challenge for the central bank: Its effort to support the economy by lowering borrowing costs may not bear fruit if investors are acting to boost longer-term borrowing rates.
The economy grew at a solid annual rate of just below 3% over the past six months, while consumer spending — fueled by higher-income shoppers — rose strongly in the July-September quarter.
At the same time, companies have reined in hiring, with many people who are out of work struggling to find jobs. Powell has suggested that the Fed is reducing its key rate in part to bolster the job market. But if economic growth continues at a healthy clip and inflation climbs again, the central bank will come under growing pressure to slow or stop its interest rate cuts.
veryGood! (21)
Related
- Buckingham Palace staff under investigation for 'bar brawl'
- Round ‘em up: Eight bulls escape a Massachusetts rodeo and charge through a mall parking lot
- Washington Nationals' CJ Abrams sent to minors after casino all-nighter
- NFL schedule today: Everything to know about Week 3 games on Sunday
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- 2 suspended from college swim team after report of slur scratched onto student’s body
- Missouri Supreme Court to consider death row case a day before scheduled execution
- Washington Nationals' CJ Abrams sent to minors after casino all-nighter
- A Georgia governor’s latest work after politics: a children’s book on his cats ‘Veto’ and ‘Bill’
- Is Teen Mom Alum Kailyn Lowry Truly Done Having Kids After 7? She Says…
Ranking
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Milton Reese: Stock options notes 1
- Washington Nationals' CJ Abrams sent to minors after casino all-nighter
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Lace Up
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Democrats and Republicans finally agree on something: America faces a retirement crisis
- New York's sidewalk fish pond is still going strong. Never heard of it? What to know.
- Excellence Vanguard Wealth Business School: The Rise of the Next Generation of Financial Traders
Recommendation
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
Colorado stuns Baylor in overtime in miracle finish
Defense calls Pennsylvania prosecutors’ case against woman in 2019 deaths of 2 children ‘conjecture’
YouTube rolling out ads that appear when videos are paused
NCAA hits former Michigan coach Jim Harbaugh with suspension, show-cause for recruiting violations
Olivia Munn, John Mulaney reveal surprise birth of second child: 'Love my little girl'
Josh Heupel shows Oklahoma football what it's missing as Tennessee smashes Sooners
Proof Gisele Bündchen's Boyfriend Joaquim Valente Is Bonding With Her and Tom Brady's Kids