With the job market weakening, a September Fed interest rate cut seems imminent. How big could it be?

Key takeaways

  • A rate cut at the Fed's next meeting in September seems likely, as the job market weakens and inflation retreats back to the Fed's 2 percent target.

  • The unemployment rate has increased to 4.3 percent from a historic low of 3.5 percent just 12 months ago, fueling fears about a potential recession.

  • Economists are beginning to project that the Fed could cut interest rates at all three remaining meetings of this year, by either a quarter of a percentage point or a bigger half-point move.

Throughout this year, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell has said he could see two scenarios that would warrant interest rate cuts. First, inflation could retreat, giving the U.S. central bank confidence that it’s slowed the economy enough. Second, the job market could start to weaken, sounding alarm bells within the Fed that it may need to stave off a bigger slowdown.

Right now, both scenarios look like real possibilities.

The Fed’s preferred inflation measure is just half a percentage point above the Fed’s 2 percent goal, while the unemployment rate has rapidly increased from a historic low. Meanwhile, in July, the share of Americans in the labor force who are jobless rose to 4.3 percent, the highest since October 2021, the latest Department of Labor data showed.

The news comes two days after Chair Powell said Fed officials debated cutting interest rates in July but thought they still had time to wait and see that inflation is back on track.

“If we do get the data that we hope, then a reduction in our policy rate could be on the table at the September meeting,” the chief central banker said after the latest Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting July 30-31. “Inflation is probably a little farther from its target than employment, but the downside risks to the employment mandate are real now.”

The Fed’s next scheduled opportunity to cut interest rates is over a month away, and investors are responding to the unexpected weakness with fears that the Fed made a mistake by holding interest rates steady. The S&P 500 dropped more than 2 percent throughout the trading day on Friday, while the NASDAQ dropped almost 3 percent.

As the weaker data rolled in, the debate among economists over a September rate cut shifted from “will they or won’t they?” to “how big will they go?”

“The across-the-board weakness in the July employment report further fuels the view that the Fed is late to easing monetary policy,” Nationwide Chief Economist Kathy Bostjancic says. Another economist, Capital Economics’ Stephen Brown, says the Fed might debate cutting by half a percentage point, rather than a quarter of a percentage point. Meanwhile, if future reports show more weakness, Fed officials may even debate raising borrowing costs at an emergency unscheduled move, he adds.