Fed's half-point rate cut: What bankers should know

POWELL-JEROME-FED-072722
Jerome Powell, chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Ting Shen/Bloomberg

WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve lowered its benchmark interest rate on Wednesday, officially ending its post-pandemic policy tightening cycle.

The Federal Open Market Committee reduced the federal funds rate by 50 basis points, bringing its target range to between 4.75% and 5%. The policy adjustment was backed by a vote of 11 to 1, with Gov. Michelle Bowman voting against. She preferred a 25-basis-point reduction.

The group also projected that it would ease monetary policy further before the end of the year but with split views about whether one or two cuts would be necessary. There are only two meetings left in 2024, one in early November and another in mid-December.

Bill Adams, chief economist for Dallas-based Comerica Bank, said the initial cut and the forecast for more bodes well for banking activities that were curtailed by the shift to higher rates in 2022 and 2023.

"With the Fed pivoting, interest rates will be substantially lower over the next six to twelve months. That is very welcome news for credit sensitive sectors of the economy like housing, manufacturing, and retailers of cars and other big-ticket consumer products, which bore the brunt of high rates," Adams said. "Those sectors are a coiled spring that will rebound as interest rates fall, sustaining the current economic expansion into 2025."

Tom Collins, a senior partner at the consultancy West Monroe, said lower rates will likely increase the demand for loans and improve "top line" revenue for banks. He added that the cut could also be beneficial in helping banks attract depositors, as bank alternatives such money market mutual funds become less attractive.

Overall, Collins said, the cuts should benefit banks as funding costs fall and assets disrupted by higher rates recover.

"Because deposit rates typically fall faster than loan prices, banks are likely to experience a temporary improvement in their net interest margin, boosting earnings in the short term," he said. "Another driver of improved margins is the potential reversal of loan loss reserves. Many banks have already reserved against risks related to a slowing economy, a consumer recession, and commercial real estate defaults. Reversing these reserves could further enhance banks' earnings."

In its initial statement, the committee noted an "uncertain" economic outlook and an attentiveness to "both sides of its dual mandate" — to keep prices stable and unemployment low — as reasons for the cut.

The move to ease monetary policy was widely anticipated coming into this week's FOMC meeting. Last month, in a speech delivered in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, Fed Chair Jerome Powell said "the time has come" to begin cutting rates. 

Powell said he was confident price growth was on a sustainable path toward the central bank's long-term goal of 2%. He added that the labor market has come into better balance in recent months, with job openings no longer outpacing job seekers at a dramatic clip. The shift to lower interest rates, he said, should prevent that softening from turning into significant job losses.

"It seems unlikely that the labor market will be a source of elevated inflationary pressures anytime soon," Powell said in August. "We do not seek or welcome further cooling in labor market conditions."

Federal Reserve Bank of New York President John Williams also called for a cut at this month's meeting, as did Fed Gov. Christopher Waller, who put his support behind a series of reductions and noted that it could make sense to "front load" cuts — meaning reducing the policy target by intervals greater than 25 basis points with the intent of reaching the optimal range quickly. 

"I was a big advocate of front-loading rate hikes when inflation accelerated in 2022, and I will be an advocate of front-loading rate cuts if that is appropriate," Waller said on Sept. 6. "Those decisions will be determined by new data and how it adds to the totality of the data and shapes my understanding of economic conditions."

Market participants incorporated those views into their forecasts. More than 60% of derivatives traders expected a half-percentage point cut coming into the meeting, according to CME Group's FedWatch tool — which measures federal funds rate futures trading. The other 39% percent expected a 25-basis-point reduction.

Along with this month's policy position, the FOMC also released its quarterly summary of economic projections, in which participants — seven Federal Reserve Board governors and 12 regional reserve bank presidents — write down their expectations for future developments. The forecasts are non-binding, as the committee makes its decisions on a meeting by meeting basis, but they establish baseline expectations. 

Nine participants said they expect to lower federal funds rate an additional half percentage point this year, to a range of between 4.25% and 4.5%. Meanwhile, seven believe a single quarter-point cut will suffice. Two expect the policy rate to remain where it is and one projected 75 basis points of further easing.

Wednesday's policy move was the first time the FOMC has cut interest rates since March 2020, when it dropped its policy rate to effectively zero in response to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. 

The federal funds rate remained at that lower bound until March 2022, when the Fed began to tighten its monetary policy stance in response to runaway inflation, which peaked at more than 9%, a 40-year high. 

During the following months, the Fed raised interest rates at the sharpest pace since the early 1980s, executing 75-basis-point hikes at four straight meetings. Ultimately, the FOMC bumped its target range up to between 5.25% and 5.5%, the highest level since 2001. 

The Fed's next meeting will be held on Nov. 6 and 7, immediately following federal elections, which will take place on Nov. 5.

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Federal Reserve Politics and policy Monetary policy
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