The Federal Reserve cut rates by 25 basis points this week, its third reduction since September, as policymakers try to cushion a cooling labor market without reigniting inflation. ABC News noted the cut was widely anticipated, with futures markets pricing in nearly 90% odds ahead of the decision, which helps explain why long-term rates barely budged after the announcement (third rate cut).
Where it hits. Relief will be uneven across household balance sheets. The average 30-year fixed mortgage rate is 6.22% (Freddie Mac), and experts expect little immediate change because mortgages key off longer-term rate expectations like the 10-year Treasury, not just the Fed’s overnight policy rate (30-year rate 6.22%). Credit cards are more directly tied to Fed policy. The average card APR is 19.8%, so a quarter-point cut can reduce interest costs at the margin, though it won’t feel like a reset for most borrowers (average APR 19.8%).
Why now. Policymakers are navigating a familiar trap. Inflation has been sticky while hiring has slowed. Powell signaled the Fed is “well positioned to wait and see,” and markets currently expect two more quarter-point cuts next year, not a fast easing cycle. That keeps the risk of “higher for longer” financing costs alive even as headline policy rates come down (two cuts next year).
Plan around cash flow, not forecasts. If you’re refinancing, prioritize break-even math over hoping mortgage rates suddenly follow the Fed lower. If you carry card balances, the fastest win is still paying down principal, since even “lower” APRs are starting from ~20%.