What a Lower Interest Rate Means to the Market

More than two years after first taking steps to contain swelling inflation, the Federal Reserve (the Fed) has taken a step back, suggesting monetary policy decision-makers have confidence that inflation will continue to move closer to the Fed’s target, allowing them to turn some attention to economic growth.

At its September meeting, the bank’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) trimmed the target range of the federal funds rate – effectively the baseline interest rate across the U.S. economy – a half of a percentage point to 4.75% – 5.00%, down from 5.25% – 5.50%. The Fed is expected to make additional reductions in time, with decisions informed by data on inflation, the rate of unemployment, consumer spending, labor productivity and other key metrics.

The Federal Reserve, the independent authority over U.S. monetary policy, is charged with two distinct and often competing mandates: to support price stability – understood as a steady, low rate of inflation – and full employment. After roughly two years trying to slow the economy with higher interest rates to dampen inflation, this action is expected to bolster the economy and prevent a further slowdown.

What this means for your financial plan

The U.S. has a high-trust, credit-driven economy, so changes in interest rates have far-reaching effects. Investors and consumers may expect changes to:

Retail credit: Interest rates on new loans are likely to come down, including rates on mortgages, auto loans, securities based lending and home equity loans. Interest rates on existing variable rate loans, such as adjustable-rate mortgages and credit cards, may also decrease.

For those who took on a new traditional loan during this period of elevated interest rates, it probably won’t be worth the cost in fees to refinance, at least not yet, but the current consensus is that the Federal Reserve will continue lowering rates. However, don’t expect the near-zero interest rates of the early 2010s or 2020/2021 to return. They were a historical anomaly the Fed was slowly addressing before the pandemic forced a new tack.