
The Federal Reserve lowered interest rates by 25 basis points as expected, but three committee members opposed it. It still anticipates one rate cut next year and will purchase $40 billion in short-term bonds

The Federal Reserve's interest rate decision faced three dissenting votes for the first time since 2019, with one member advocating for a 50 basis point cut, while two voting members and four non-voting members supported maintaining the current rate, effectively resulting in seven opposing the decision, reportedly the largest disagreement in 37 years. The meeting statement removed the phrase "keeping unemployment low"; it added considerations for the "magnitude and timing" of potential further rate cuts, which is seen as indicating a higher threshold for rate reductions. To maintain sufficient reserves, the Fed will begin purchasing short-term debt starting Friday. "New Federal Reserve News Agency": The Fed hinted that it may not cut rates again temporarily due to significant internal disagreements that are "rare."
Due to copyright restrictions, please log in to view.
Thank you for supporting legitimate content.

