SATURDAY, April 20, 2024
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Federal Reserve cuts interest rate for third time this year in effort to boost U.S. economy

Federal Reserve cuts interest rate for third time this year in effort to boost U.S. economy

The Federal Reserve reduced the benchmark U.S. interest rate for the third time this year Wednesday in an effort to boost the economy as the trade war and a global slowdown threaten to drag the U.S. economy down.

But it also signaled that its campaign of rate cuts has come to an end, with Fed Chair Jerome Powell telling reporters that the current stance was "appropriate."

Fed leaders have stressed that they do not see a recession on the horizon. Instead, they have sought to portray these rate reductions as "insurance" cuts that are meant to give the economy extra protection in a world of rising uncertainty.

The central bank lowered the benchmark interest rate a quarter of a percentage point to a range of 1.5 percent to 1.75 percent. The move should trigger mortgage, auto and personal loan rates to fall, making it cheaper to borrow money. Home prices and home sales have ticked up since the Fed began lowering rates in late July.

"Weakness in global growth and trade developments have weighed on the economy and posed ongoing risks," Powell said.

He suggested that, if the economy continues at the pace the Fed now forecasts, the central bank could stand pat and not cut rates further.

"We see the current stance of monetary policy as likely to remain appropriate as long as incoming information about the economy remains broadly consistent with our outlook," Powell said. "If developments emerge that cause a material reassessment of our outlook, we would respond accordingly. Policy is not on a pre-set course."

President Donald Trump and Wall Street are looking for signals of how much more the Fed will lower rates heading into the presidential election, but Powell suggested on Wednesday that it was pausing for the foreseeable future.

"This is the clearest signal we've gotten that the time for action is over for the Fed," said Mike Loewengart, vice president of investment strategy at E*Trade.

Fed leaders signaled Wednesday that they are going to wait and see what happens to the economy and trade talks before they commit to another cut. All summer, Powell stressed that the Fed would "act as appropriate to sustain the expansion," but that phrase was scrapped from the statement announcing the latest decision.

The U.S. economy is growing at a "moderate" pace, and hiring remains strong, the Fed said, but business investment is weak, and "uncertainties about this outlook remain." Growth in the third quarter slipped to 1.9 percent, the Commerce Department reported Wednesday, one of the slowest paces in recent years.

"Although household spending has been rising at a strong pace, business fixed investment and exports remain weak," the Fed wrote in the statement.

Fed leaders anticipated that growth would cool this year and next to around 2 percent, a level they considered the long-run trend pace for the economy. The rate cuts are meant to prevent growth from slipping much below that pace. There is concern that businesses have slashed spending in recent months and that they could turn around and cut workers next, but so far hiring has remained solid.

Trump has repeatedly bashed the Fed, even labeling them "boneheads," for not cutting interest rates more. Trump tweeted five times about the Fed's September rate cut and this week's in an attempt to jawbone the Fed for more stimulus ahead of the presidential election, but the president's efforts were noticeably less than the 43 times he tweeted or retweeted about the Fed before the September interest rate decision.

The president blames the Fed for raising interest rates four times last year - to a level close to 2.5 percent - which Trump argues caused companies to pull back on spending. After the Fed's move Wednesday, U.S. interest rates are now at the same level as they were in spring 2018.

Most business leaders say trade uncertainty has caused them to scale back investment as they wait and see what happens with talks between the world's two largest economies. But the stock market remains very high, the unemployment rate is low, and the housing market in some parts of the country has shown new signs of life, offering a mixed picture of the economy's broader performance.

 

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