After likely quarter-point rate cut, Fed may slow pace of drops if inflation lingers

(This story was updated because an earlier version included an inaccuracy and to add new information.)

After slashing its key interest rate by a hefty half percentage point in September, the Federal Reserve is expected to lower rates by a more measured quarter point Thursday and several times next year as inflation continues to ease.

But if the Fed veers from that steady pace, it likely would be to reduce rates less sharply to ensure inflation keeps falling, economists say.

That may defy some forecasters’ view that the central bank largely has won the battle against soaring prices and must bring down interest rates swiftly to achieve a “soft landing” that avoids a recession.

“The risks are more likely than not tilted toward a pause (in December) rather than” a half-point cut, said Barclays economist Marc Giannoni. He figures the most likely scenario is still a middle-ground approach - a quarter point rate cut this week and in December.

The stock market, though, has surged on the prospect of steady rate cuts and a pause could roil equities.

Republican Donald Trump's election as president Tuesday likely will spur faster inflation because of his trade, immigration and tax policies, economists say, further raising the risk that the Fed will enact fewer rate cuts.

The Fed cut its key rate by a half percentage point in September.
The Fed cut its key rate by a half percentage point in September.

How does a rise in interest rates affect inflation?

In 2022 and 2023, the Fed hiked its benchmark rate to a 23-year high of 5.25% to 5.5% to wrestle down a pandemic-induced inflation spike before lowering rates for the first time in four years in September.

The fed hoists rates to discourage borrowing and economic activity to tamp down inflation. It lowers rates to stimulate weak job gains and a flagging economy.

What slows an economy?

After a two-day meeting concludes Thursday, economists don’t expect Fed Chair Jerome Powell to signal when or how quickly the Fed will decrease rates, instead saying its actions will depend on how the economy and inflation evolve. A market sell-off that hammers consumer spending, a spike in bankruptcies among struggling small businesses or worries about federal policy changes after the election all could rattle the job market, economists say.

Last week’s dismal October jobs report at least raised questions about whether the central bank should again lower rates by a half point this week to juice a labor market that could be losing steam more rapidly than expected.

Although two Southeast hurricanes and a Boeing workers’ strike were projected to dampen payrolls, the 12,000 jobs added last month were far fewer than the 105,000 expected. And job growth for August and September was revised down by a whopping 112,000 positions.