The Fed May Cut Interest Rates. Here’s What That Means for You

Americans juggle a lot of interest rates in their daily lives. They pay interest on car loans, credit card balances and mortgages. They earn interest, at least a little, on the money they save with banks.

Technically speaking, Federal Reserve officials will not touch any of those rates when they announce what economists widely expect will be a quarter-point interest-rate cut on Wednesday, which would be the first cut in a decade. The rate they would be reducing is the federal funds rate, which is what banks and other financial institutions charge each other for very short-term borrowing.

Most consumers don’t do that sort of overnight borrowing, but the Fed’s moves still affect the borrowing and saving rates they encounter every day.

The effect is not always direct and it is not always immediate, so consumers probably will not wake up on Thursday to find that all of their favorite rates changed by a quarter of a point. There is even solid evidence that the mere expectation that the Fed will cut rates on Wednesday has already pushed down some of the key rates that consumers pay.

One of the biggest potential impacts of the Fed’s expected cut may be one you don’t see: heading off a recession. If the move works, it could prevent the economy from weakening and forestall layoffs and other economic damage that could hurt workers and consumers.

Here’s where you might see effects from the expected cut.

When the Fed held rates near zero for years after the 2008 financial crisis in hopes of stoking growth and job creation as the economy recovered from a brutal recession, there was basically no financial incentive to save money with a bank. Near the end of 2015, the average one-year certificate of deposit account yielded an annual return of just over 0.25 percent, according to Bankrate.com.

Fed officials have raised rates nine times since then, by a quarter-point in each instance. The increases have lifted savers, though not by that much. The average yield on a one-year C.D. briefly cracked 1 percent earlier this year. But it has fallen since then, as has the average yield on the five-year C.D. amid bigger hints from Fed officials that a rate cut was in the works. The trend could continue, especially if officials signal an openness to another rate cut in the fall.

Savers looking for a higher return might consider online savings accounts, which, in many cases, are still paying yields of 2 to 2.5 percent. Some accounts require a minimum balance, but that is occasionally as low as $1.

If you borrowed money to buy a house late last year, you were unlucky — and it cost you. In November, as the Fed neared what appears to have been the end — for now at least — of its slow-march of interest-rate increases, the average rate on a 30-year mortgage was nearly 5 percent. It has since fallen by more than a percentage point, to 3.75 percent.

The slide is tied to the Fed’s expected move to cut rates, said Greg McBride, Bankrate.com’s chief financial analyst, and for consumers, it is probably the most consequential effect of the shift in the Fed’s policy path.

It is also probably fully priced in, unless the Fed shows a strong hint that more rate cuts are coming.

“Mortgage rates are tied to long-term rates, so they move well in advance,” Mr. McBride said. “Any further movement in mortgage rates will be tied to the outlook ahead.”

Historically speaking, mortgage rates do not have much farther to fall. In the past half-century, the average 30-year rate has never dipped below 3.3 percent.

One interest rate that has risen by as many percentage points as the federal funds rate in the past few years is the one you probably wish would stay lower: the average interest rate on credit-card debt. It is now at nearly 18 percent and, unlike savings yields and mortgage rates, it has not fallen in recent months. That probably means you should not expect it to fall immediately after the Fed’s anticipated cut.

Rates on car loans have risen since 2016, but they fell back slightly this year. After peaking near 5 percent at the end of last year, the rate on the average five-year loan for a new car is now just under 4.75 percent, according to Bankrate.com. As with rates on credit cards, the rate on car loans does not always move in line with the Fed: It actually fell in 2016, even as the Fed raised rates.

Those rates help explain, in part, why most economists do not expect that a single Fed rate cut will be enough to change consumers’ spending habits.

“The impact on the household budget of one rate cut is inconsequential,” Mr. McBride said. “It’s not like it’s going to unleash a flurry of consumer activity”

In the scope of your financial life, of course, what you pay to borrow — or what you are paid to save — typically takes a back seat to more basic questions about how much you are able to work and to earn. Those questions appear to be on Fed officials’ minds as they consider cutting rates.

“It’s better to take preventative measures than to wait for disaster to unfold,” John Williams, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, said this month, in comments that were widely interpreted as signaling that a rate cut was on the way.

In other words: By moving to reduce rates, now and possibly again this fall, policymakers are trying to reduce the risk that millions of Americans could be thrown out of work. They are trying to ward off the prospect of a job-killing recession by giving the economy a little extra boost.

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