Fed Cuts Interest Rate Again: 5 ETFs Likely to Gain

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The Federal Reserve, in its meeting, slashed interest rates for the second time this year. It cut key interest rates by 25 bps, bringing down the benchmark rate to 4.5%-4.75%, following the 50-bps cut in September 2024. This reflects the Fed's renewed focus on supporting the job market and fighting inflation.

The Fed said that recent indicators suggest that “economic activity has continued to expand at a solid pace,” and the "unemployment rate has moved up but remains low." Inflation has fallen closer to the central bank's target but "remains somewhat elevated." 

The probability of a quarter-point December rate cut rose to more than 70% following the meeting, while the chances of a pause slipped to nearly 29%, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. Before the Fed rate cut decision, the market was pricing in a 67% chance of another quarter-point cut in December and a 33% chance of a pause.

Low Rates: A Boon

Lower interest rates generally lead to reduced borrowing costs, which help businesses expand their operations easily, resulting in increased profitability. This, in turn, stimulates economic growth and provides a boost to the stock market. 

In particular, high dividend-yield sectors, such as utilities and real estate, will be the biggest beneficiaries of the rate cuts, given their sensitivity to interest rates. This is especially true as these offer higher returns due to their outsized yields. In real estate, lower rates can boost housing market activities by making mortgages more affordable. Securities in capital-intensive sectors like telecom will also benefit from lower rates. Businesses will face lower loan rates over time. 

Lower rates will have a positive impact on consumer discretionary and financial services. Reduced borrowing costs will lead to increased consumer spending for consumer discretionary sectors. In the financial sector, while lower rates can compress net interest margins for banks, they can also encourage lending and lead to increased consumer and business loan activity.

Small-caps are set to outperform in a lower-rate environment as these companies have higher levels of debt. Fed rate cuts tend to boost foreign capital inflows into emerging markets like India. As the outlook for India’s economy remains strong, rate cuts will boost foreign capital inflow, which can lead the market to new highs. Gold will also continue to shine as lower interest rates will increase the metal’s attractiveness (read: Small-Cap ETFs Set to Explode Under Trump Presidency).

Given this, we have highlighted ETFs from sectors that are set to explode following a rate cut.