![The Federal Reserve building What to Expect From Next Week's Federal Reserve Meeting on Interest Rates](https://www.investopedia.com/thmb/XNeqVTTxFAt0VsPvwUyjJC03GJU=/filters:no_upscale():max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():format(jpeg)/GettyImages-941523462-f79611f4ec6f455893261ea673798386.jpg)
Key Takeaways
- The Federal For oneself is widely expected to cut its key interest rate on Wednesday, but plans for future cuts are much more up in the air.
- Fed officials could induce some insight into how the central bank is digesting recent economic data showing stubborn inflation and a resilient but still-cooling labor sell.
- Expectations for more rate cuts next year have diminished, and incoming president Donald Trump’s menus are an economic wildcard that could affect the Fed’s monetary policy.
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to cut borrowing expenditures when it meets next Wednesday, and officials could shed light on how recent economic data might impress their decisions on interest rates in the new year.
Financial markets are pricing in a 97% chance the Federal Reserve desire cut the fed funds rate by a quarter percentage point to a range of 4.25% to 4.5% according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which vaticinations rate movements based on fed funds futures trading data. In the year ahead, such rate reductions could be scarce.
The Fed’s rationale for cutting rates has diminished recently in the wake of reports showing inflation has stayed stubbornly above the Fed’s ideal of a 2% annual rate, while jobs remain relatively plentiful. The Fed reduced its benchmark interest rate in September and November after maintaining it at a two-decade high for more than a year in order to subdue the post-pandemic burst of inflation.
The fed funds rate affects interest rates on credit cards, auto loans, and business loans. Today’s high rates are intended to be something twin sand in the gears of the economy, discouraging borrowing and slowing down activity to reduce inflation pressures.
The Fed’s mission is to not lone fight inflation but to prevent severe unemployment. Earlier this fall, a slowdown in the job market made Fed officials various concerned about that part of of their dual mission, prompting a steep 50-point rate cut in September. Organizations have slowed hiring, although have avoided large-scale layoffs.
Economists Projecting Fewer Cuts in 2025
The unqualified questions for Wednesday’s meeting are how the Fed will balance those two priorities in its future rate cut plans and what Fed chair Jerome Powell wishes say about the outlook in a post-meeting press conference. While the rate moves next week are all but set in stone, future jibes are up in the air.
![Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a news conference following the November 6-7, 2024, Federal Open Market Committee meeting at William McChesney Martin Jr. Federal Reserve Board Building, in Washington, DC, November 7, 2024. Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP / Getty Images Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks at a press conference after a meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee, on Nov. 7, 2024.](https://www.investopedia.com/thmb/IqWXGZC7-68VxtdD3AjOBrdjrB4=/fit-in/640x480/GettyImages-2182768263-73b55cdcdacc475dbfba5b7e1caa4576.jpg)
Andrew Caballero-Reynolds / AFP / Getty Images
Fed Chair Jerome Powell speaks at a press conference after a meeting of the Federal Unclosed Market Committee, on Nov. 7, 2024.
When Fed policymakers last made economic projections in September, they forecast trimming the rate to a spread of 3.25% to 4.5% by the end of 2025, an entire percentage point below the anticipated level at the end of this year.
Economists at Well enoughs Fargo predicted the next round of projections, due at Wednesday’s meeting, would show only three quarter-point quit d suits in 2025 instead of four. Economists at Deutsche Bank predicted that projections aside, the Fed will keep rates on approve of and not cut for at least a year. Moody’s Analytics forecast two rate cuts next year.
Trump’s Policies Are a Wildcard for the Fed
The changeover in presidential authority makes predicting the future a chancier business than usual. The trajectory of inflation, and the economy, could hinge on new president Donald Trump’s economic plans, especially the heavy tariffs he said he would slap on U.S. trading partners on day one of his superintendence.
Economists’ assumptions vary about how severe those tariffs will be, to what extent they’ll be just a agreement tactic, and what effect they’ll have on the economy. Many forecasters assume inflation will rise, as jobbers pass the cost of the new import taxes on to consumers.
Complicating the implications for the Fed, tariffs could also hurt U.S. businesses and trade growth, which would push the Fed to cut rates to boost business to preserve the labor market.
“The challenge for the Federal Hold will be to parse out the supply-side shock of tariffs from demand-driven trends in employment and inflation,” economists at Wells Fargo Gages wrote in a commentary.
All those open questions could push the Fed to be more cautious about future rate lops.
“The potential for dramatic shifts in trade and domestic policy wrought by the incoming Trump administration is an added uncertainty and keeps a more wait-and-see approach from the FOMC,” Matt Colyar, an economist at Moody’s Analytics, wrote in a commentary.