Monthly wealth stream


The Federal Reserve is expected to lower interest rates by another quarter point on Dec. 18 at the end of its two-day meeting. That would mark the third rate cut in a row — all together shaving a full percentage point off the federal funds rate since September.

So far, the central bank has moved slowly as they recalibrate policy after swiftly hiking rates when inflation hit a 40-year high.

“This could be the last cut for a while,” said Jacob Channel, senior economic analyst at LendingTree.

The Fed might choose to take “a wait-and-see approach” because there is some uncertainty around President-elect Donald Trump’s fiscal policy when he begins his second term, Channel said.

In the meantime, high interest rates have affected all sorts of consumer borrowing costs, from auto loans to credit cards. 

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The federal funds rate, which the U.S. central bank sets, is the rate at which banks borrow and lend to one another overnight. Although that’s not the rate consumers pay, the Fed’s moves still affect the borrowing and savings rates consumers see every day.

A December cut could lower the Fed’s overnight borrowing rate by a quarter percentage point, or 25 basis points, to a range of between 4.25% and 4.50% from its current range of between 4.50% and 4.75%. 

That “will exert some margin of easing of financial pressure,” said Brett House, economics professor at Columbia Business School, but not across the board.

“Some of the most important interest rates that people face don’t benchmark off the Fed rate,” he said.

From credit cards to car loans to mortgages, here’s a breakdown of how it works:

Credit cards

Mortgage rates

Auto loans

Student loans

Savings rates


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