Close Menu
Gossips Today
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Healthcare
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Business
  • Recipes
What's Hot

Prime Members Are Ahead of the Game With These 50 Exclusive Early Memorial Day Deals at Amazon—Up to 86% Off

Housing market shift: Foreclosures are creeping back up again

MIT disavows doctoral student paper on AI’s productivity benefits

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Sunday, May 18
Gossips Today
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Tech & Innovation

    MIT disavows doctoral student paper on AI’s productivity benefits

    May 18, 2025

    Build, don’t bind: Accel’s Sonali De Rycker on Europe’s AI crossroads

    May 17, 2025

    OpenAI’s planned data center in Abu Dhabi would be bigger than Monaco

    May 17, 2025

    xAI blames Grok’s obsession with white genocide on an ‘unauthorized modification’

    May 16, 2025

    Sam Altman’s goal for ChatGPT to remember ‘your whole life’ is both exciting and disturbing

    May 16, 2025
  • Healthcare

    House committees advance reconciliation text with big impacts on healthcare

    May 18, 2025

    Rite Aid sells upwards of 1,000 stores to CVS, Walgreens, others

    May 17, 2025

    Residents more likely to suffer physical restraints, bedsores at bankrupt nursing homes: report

    May 16, 2025

    Kaiser invests in AI supply chain startup

    May 16, 2025

    RFK Jr. calls GOP Medicaid plans ‘not true cuts’

    May 15, 2025
  • Personal Finance

    4 Steps to Navigate Marriage and Debt

    May 11, 2025

    Buying a Fixer-Upper Home: What to Know

    May 10, 2025

    How to Talk to Your Spouse About Money

    May 10, 2025

    Millennials and Retirement – Ramsey

    May 9, 2025

    Retirement Education – Ramsey

    May 9, 2025
  • Lifestyle

    3 Fixes If You Hate the Way Your Pants Fit (That Have Nothing to Do with Your Waist Size)

    May 14, 2025

    On Sale Now: 9 Nike Sneakers Under $100 You’ll Want to Wear All Summer

    May 10, 2025

    Get the Look: Chateau Vibes, Courtyard Rates

    May 8, 2025

    Midlife Crisis, but Make It Casual

    May 6, 2025

    The Shoes You Buy Will Last Longer If You Just Understand This

    April 23, 2025
  • Travel

    Prime Members Are Ahead of the Game With These 50 Exclusive Early Memorial Day Deals at Amazon—Up to 86% Off

    May 18, 2025

    This Weeklong, Food-focused Train Ride Through Europe Was an Unexpected Way to Taste My Way Through the Region

    May 17, 2025

    I’m a TSA Employee—These 10 Mistakes Will Make You 'That' Person in the Security Line, and How to Avoid Them

    May 17, 2025

    This U.S. State Has the Most Road Rage, Report Finds

    May 16, 2025

    One of New Zealand's Most Impressive Resorts Has 20 Suites Set Along the Country's Longest River

    May 16, 2025
  • Business

    Housing market shift: Foreclosures are creeping back up again

    May 18, 2025

    North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library will redefine what a presidential library can be

    May 17, 2025

    From lab to market: Monetizing R&D 

    May 17, 2025

    OpenAI launches Codex, an AI agent for coding

    May 16, 2025

    Will NJ Transit go on strike? New warning as Friday midnight deadline nears

    May 16, 2025
  • Recipes

    challah french toast

    May 6, 2025

    charred salt and vinegar cabbage

    April 25, 2025

    simplest brisket with braised onions

    April 2, 2025

    ziti chickpeas with sausage and kale

    February 26, 2025

    classic lemon curd tart

    February 1, 2025
Gossips Today
  • Tech & Innovation
  • Healthcare
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Business
  • Recipes
Business & Entrepreneurship

Consumers could see higher borrowing costs if Fed stays on current path with interest rates

gossipstodayBy gossipstodayNovember 21, 2024No Comments6 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link Telegram LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Consumers Could See Higher Borrowing Costs If Fed Stays On
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Just a few weeks ago, the path ahead for the Federal Reserve looked straightforward: With inflation cooling and the job market slowing, the Fed appeared on track to steadily cut interest rates.

In September, its officials predicted that they would reduce their benchmark rate four times next year, on top of three rate cuts this year.

Yet that outlook has swiftly changed. Several surprisingly strong economic reports, combined with President-elect Donald Trump’s policy proposals, have led to a decidedly more cautious tone from the Fed that could mean fewer cuts and higher interest rates than had been expected.

Fewer rate cuts would likely mean continued high mortgage rates and other borrowing costs for consumers and businesses. Auto loans would remain expensive. Small businesses would still face high loan rates.

In a speech last week in Dallas, Chair Jerome Powell made clear that the Fed isn’t necessarily inclined to cut rates each time it meets every six weeks.

“The economy is not sending any signals that we need to be in a hurry to lower rates,” Powell said. “The strength we are currently seeing in the economy gives us the ability to approach our decisions carefully.”

His comments were widely seen as signaling potentially fewer rate cuts in 2025, a view that sent stock prices falling after they had surged with Trump’s election.
Trump has proposed higher tariffs on all imports as well as mass deportations of undocumented immigrants — steps that economists say would worsen inflation. The president-elect has also proposed a menu of tax cuts and deregulation, which might help spur economic growth but would also fan inflation if businesses couldn’t find enough workers to meet increased consumer demand.

And recent economic data suggests that inflation pressures could prove more persistent and economic growth more resilient than was thought just a few months ago. At his most recent news conference, Powell suggested that the economy could even accelerate in 2025.

Wall Street traders and some economists now envision just two, rather than four, rate cuts next year. And while the Fed will likely cut its key rate when it meets in mid-December, traders foresee a nearly even likelihood that the central bank could leave the rate unchanged.

“I absolutely would anticipate that they’ll ease up on the pace of cuts,” said Jim Baird, chief investment officer at Plante Moran Financial Advisors. “The potential for growth to remain strong — that has to call into question whether they will feel either the need or ability to cut rates at the pace they had previously forecast.”

Economists at Bank of America expect annual inflation to remain “stuck” above 2.5%, higher than the Fed’s 2% target level, in part given the likelihood that Trump’s economic proposals, if carried out, would fuel price pressures. The economists now foresee just three rate reductions in the coming months, in December, March and June. And they expect the Fed to stop easing credit once its benchmark rate, now at 4.6%, reaches 3.9%.

Krishna Guha, an analyst at investment bank Evercore ISI, wrote last week that, “We think the looming Trump presidency is helping to drive a change in tone from the Fed — including Powell — towards a warier and more hedged posture on the pace and extent of further cuts.”

Trump has vowed to impose a 60% tariff on all Chinese goods and a “universal” tariff of 10% or 20% on everything else that enters the United States. On Wednesday, a top executive at Walmart, the world’s largest retailer, warned that Trump’s tariff proposals could force the company to raise prices on imported goods.

“Tariffs will be inflationary for customers,” John David Rainey, Walmart’s chief financial officer, told The Associated Press. Other consumer goods and retail companies, including Lowe’s, Stanley Black & Decker, and Columbia Sportswear, have issued similar warnings.

In trying to gauge the right level for interest rates, the Fed’s policymakers face a significant obstacle: They don’t know how much further they can reduce rates before reaching a level that neither stimulates nor restrains the economy — what’s called the “neutral rate.” The officials don’t want to cut rates so low as overheat the economy and reignite inflation. Nor do they want to keep rates so high as to damage the job market and the economy and risk a recession.

An unusually wide divergence has developed among the 19 officials on the Fed’s rate-setting committee as to where the neutral rate is. In September, the officials collectively projected that the neutral rate lies between 2.4% and 3.8%. Lorie Logan, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, has noted that that range is twice as large as it was two years ago.

In a recent speech, Logan suggested that the Fed’s benchmark rate might be only slightly above the neutral level now. If so, that would mean few additional rate cuts are needed.

Other officials disagree. In a recent interview with The Associated Press, Austan Goolsbee, president of the Fed’s Chicago branch, said he thought the neutral rate is much lower than the Fed’s current rate. If so, many more rate cuts would likely be appropriate.

“I still think we’re far from what anybody thinks is neutral,” Goolsbee said. “We still got a ways to come down.”

Perhaps the biggest unknown is how Trump’s proposals on tariffs, deportations and tax cuts will shape the Fed’s rate decisions. Powell has stressed that the Fed won’t change its policymaking until it’s clear what changes the new administration will actually implement.

As is customary for the Fed, though, Powell avoided commenting directly on presidential policies. But he did acknowledge that the Fed’s economists are assessing the potential effects of a Trump presidency.

“We don’t actually really know what policies will be put in place,” Powell said. “We don’t know over what timeframe.”

Another factor is that the economy is much different now than when Trump first took office in January 2017. With unemployment lower than it was then, economists say, additional stimulus through tax cuts might create more demand than the economy can handle, possibly fueling inflation.

Tax cuts, “starting from an economy close to full employment, will lead to inflation and, by implication, higher Fed policy rates and a stronger dollar,” Olivier Blanchard, a former top economist at the International Monetary Fund and senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, wrote in a recent commentary.

In 2018, when Trump imposed a slew of tariffs on imports from China, as well as on steel, aluminum and washing machines, Fed economists produced an analysis of how they should respond.

Their conclusion? As long as the tariffs were one-time increases and the public didn’t expect inflation to rise, the Fed wouldn’t have to respond by raising its key rate.

Yet last week, Powell acknowledged that the economy was different now, with inflation a bigger threat.

“Six years ago,” he said, “inflation was really low and inflation expectations were low. And now, we’ve come way back down, but we’re not back where we were. It’s a different situation.”

—Christopher Rugaber, AP Economics Writer

borrowing Consumers costs current Fed higher interest path rates Stays
Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
Previous ArticleDOJ: Google must sell Chrome to end monopoly
Next Article Travelers Are Using This Spacious Backpack as Their Carry-on for International Travel — and It’s Only $32
admin
gossipstoday
  • Website

Related Posts

Housing market shift: Foreclosures are creeping back up again

May 18, 2025

North Dakota’s Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library will redefine what a presidential library can be

May 17, 2025

From lab to market: Monetizing R&D 

May 17, 2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Trending Now

How to Get and Stay Motivated When Starting a New Exercise and Diet Phase

Alignment Healthcare names new president as insurer eyes growth

What Is a Bear Market?

Prime Members Are Ahead of the Game With These 50 Exclusive Early Memorial Day Deals at Amazon—Up to 86% Off

Latest Posts

Prime Members Are Ahead of the Game With These 50 Exclusive Early Memorial Day Deals at Amazon—Up to 86% Off

May 18, 2025

Housing market shift: Foreclosures are creeping back up again

May 18, 2025

MIT disavows doctoral student paper on AI’s productivity benefits

May 18, 2025

Subscribe to News

Subscribe to our newsletter and stay updated with the latest news and exclusive offers.

Advertisement
Demo
Black And Beige Minimalist Elegant Cosmetics Logo (4) (1)
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest Vimeo WhatsApp TikTok Instagram

Categories

  • Tech & Innovation
  • Health & Wellness
  • Personal Finance
  • Lifestyle & Productivity

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise With Us

Services

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Subscribe to Updates

© 2025 Gossips Today. All Right Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.