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Federal Reserve Lowers Benchmark Rate by 0.25 Points

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The Federal Reserve reduced its main interest rate by one quarter point and forecasted that it would lower it twice more this year as the central bank becomes more anxious about the wellbeing of the labor market in the nation.

It is the first reduction in short-term rate since December and dropped the short-term rate of the Fed to approximately 4.1 percent, which was reduced to 4.3 percent. This year the Federal officials under the chairmanship of Jerome Powell had maintained their rate because they were assessing how the tariffs, increased immigration enforcement, and other Trump administration policies were affecting inflation and the economy.

But the emphasis of the central bank has rapidly switched away from inflation, which is still fairly above its two percent target, to jobs since employment has all but stagnated over the past several months and the unemployment rate has been breaking higher.

Lower interest rates could reduce borrowing costs for mortgages, car loans, and business loans and boost growth and hiring.

“In this less dynamic and somewhat softer labour market, the downside risks to employment appear to have risen,” Mr. Powell said at a press conference following the Federal’s two-day meeting.

Federal officials also signalled that they expect to reduce their key rate twice more this year, but just once in 2026, which may disappoint Wall Street. Before the meeting, investors had projected five cuts for the rest of this year and next.

Just one Federal policymaker dissented from the decision: Stephen Miran, who President Donald Trump appointed and was confirmed by the Senate in a rushed vote late Monday just hours before the meeting began. Miran preferred a larger half-point cut, but Mr. Powell told reporters there wasn't “very much support” for the bigger-size cut among Federal officials.

Many economists had forecast there would be additional dissents, and the meeting’s outcome suggests that Mr. Powell was able to patch together a show of unity from a committee that includes Miran and two other Trump appointees from his first term, as well as a Federal Governor.

The Federal is facing both a challenging economic environment and threats to its traditional independence from day-to-day politics. At the same time that hiring has weakened, inflation remains stubbornly elevated. It rose 2.9 percent in August from a year ago, according to the consumer price index, up from 2.7 percent in July and noticeably above the Fed’s two percent target.

It's unusual to have weaker hiring and elevated inflation, because typically a slowing economy causes consumers to pull back on spending, cooling price hikes. Mr. Powell suggested last month that sluggish growth could keep inflation in check even if tariffs lift prices further.

Separately, Mr. Trump’s attempted firing of Ms. Cook is the first time a President has tried to remove a Federal Governor in the central bank’s 112-year history and has been seen by many legal scholars as an unprecedented attack on the Federal’s independence.

His administration has accused Ms. Cook of mortgage fraud, but the accusation has come in the context of Mr. Trump’s extensive criticism of Mr. Powell and the Federal for not cutting rates much faster and steeper.

Also Read: Crisil Predicts 13 Percent Rise in Bank Lending

An appeals court late Monday upheld an earlier ruling that the firing violated Ms. Cook’s due process rights. A lower court had also previously ruled that Trump did not provide sufficient justification to remove Ms. Cook. Also late , the Senate voted to approve Mr. Miran’s nomination, and he was quickly sworn in.

Mr. Trump said Federal officials “have to make their own choice” but added that “they should listen to smart people like me.” Mr. Trump has said the Federal government should reduce rates by three full percentage points.

Also Read: Andhra CM Urges Centre to Aid Aqua Sector Hit by US Tariffs

The Federal’s move to cut rates puts it in a different spot from many other central banks overseas. Last week, the European Central Bank left its benchmark rate unchanged, as inflation has largely cooled and the economy has seen limited damage, so far, from U.S. tariffs.

Also Read: Dollar Set for Weekly Rise as Middle East Conflict Fuels Safe-Haven Demand

The Bank of England is also expected to keep its rate on hold as inflation, at 3.8 percent, remains higher than in the United States.

 

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