Labor market doesn’t contribute significantly to price growth, Powell says
Fed Chair Jerome Powell said the job market is not a key driver of inflation.
“The labor market is not a source of significant inflationary pressures,” Powell said.
The Fed chair said payroll expansion has slowed in recent months, while the unemployment rate has increased compared with a year ago. Overall, he said the labor market is viewed as less tight than just before the pandemic, but is still considered “solid.”
— Alex Harring
Fed can take ‘a more deliberate’ pace on rate cuts from here, Bankrate chief financial analyst says
The central bank’s move came in as expected – and it will likely continue taking a measured approach going forward, said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.
“The Federal Reserve continues to lift the foot off the brake pedal, cutting interest rates by one-quarter percentage point, as expected,” he said. “The solid pace of economic growth means the Fed can abandon the urgency seen with the half-point cut in September and take a more deliberate, quarter-point pace with this and future rate cuts.”
He noted that the recent surge in Treasury yields dampens the effect of the rate cut, however.
“The big increase in mortgage rates, from 6.2% to 7% in the past 7 weeks, hits harder than a quarter-percentage point drop in a credit card rate,” McBride added.
—Darla Mercado
Fed Chair Powell likely to get questions about Trump’s proposed policies
Fed Chair Powell is likely to face questions from reporters at the 2:30 p.m. ET press conference over the effects of tax and spending proposals promised in the incoming Trump Administration that takes office in January.
Donald Trump as president frequently railed against the Fed and Powell. In 2019, for example, he slammed the central bank several times, at one point saying it was a bigger obstacle to American prosperity than China.
— Scott Schnipper
Major averages hold steady after Fed issues anticipated rate cut
The three major averages did not change much after the Federal Reserve issued its expected rate cut of a quarter point.
The S&P 500 was last up nearly 0.7% around 2:10 p.m. ET, while the Nasdaq Composite was higher by 1.4%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average flickered near the flat line, up about 15 points.
— Darla Mercado
Federal Reserve cuts rates by a quarter point
Where markets stand ahead of the Fed’s decision
At about 1:50 p.m. ET, the S&P 500 was up 0.6%, while the Nasdaq Composite surged 1.3%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average hovered near the flatline.
The 10-year Treasury yield was lower by 8 basis points, trading at 4.34%. The 2-year Treasury yield was at 4.2%, reflecting a decline of 6 basis points.
— Darla Mercado
Labor market will be focus of Powell remarks, D.A. Davidson’s Ragan says
The current view of Fed officials on the labor market could be one of the big takeaways from Powell’s press conference Thursday, according to James Ragan, director of wealth management research at D.A. Davidson.
“The biggest thing he can talk about is the jobs market because we had that hurricane-impacted number for October. Obviously a weak number, but I think the markets discounted it a lot for the hurricane impact. So I’d like to hear him talk a little a bit beyond that data,” Ragan told CNBC.
The nonfarm payrolls report for October showed a gain of just 12,000 jobs. However, storms and a since-resolved strike of Boeing workers could have temporarily lowered that number, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
— Jesse Pound
What to expect at the conclusion of the Fed’s November meeting
With the Federal Reserve expected to make a quarter-point cut on Thursday, the main event for markets will likely be Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference at 2 p.m. ET.
Traders will be on the hunt for clues from Powell on the future path of rate policy. Fed funds futures trading suggests about a 63% chance that the central bank will issue another quarter-point cut in December, but traders are also weighing the likelihood that policymakers may choose to skip that month.
Further complexity lies ahead for the central bank in light of Donald Trump winning a second trip to the White House this week. That is because the new administration’s plans include tax cuts and tariffs, which could affect the Fed’s moves toward tamping down inflation.
Read more about the Fed’s November meeting from CNBC’s Jeff Cox here.
— Darla Mercado
How today’s consumer rates stack up against March 2022
The Federal Reserve is widely expected to trim rates by a quarter point on Thursday, taking another step toward unwinding its tight policy.
To that end, consumer rates have changed significantly since the Fed started its hiking campaign in March 2022, and in some corners of the market, interest rates have cooled slightly since the central bank made its first half-point cut in September.
The rate on a $30,000 home equity line of credit sits at 8.7% as of the week of Nov. 1, according to Bankrate. That is down from 9.25% in the week of Sept. 13, but still notably higher than the rate of 4.27% back in March 2022.
Credit card interest rates came in at 20.5% as of last week, per Bankrate, sharply higher than the 16.34% in March 2022. But they are marginally cooler compared to last month’s rate of 20.78%.
The rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage was 7.09% as of the week of Nov. 1, sharply higher than the 4.29% in March 2022. However, it is also higher compared to the week of Sept. 13, when the rate was 6.12%.
That is because mortgage rates loosely follow the 10-year Treasury yield, which has recently taken a leg higher. Indeed, the benchmark yield stood at 4.363% during the week of Nov. 1, sharply higher than the 3.649% it traded at in mid-September.
— Darla Mercado, Nick Wells
Market sees a greater chance the Fed will skip rate cut in December
Traders went into Thursday’s Fed meeting convinced that a rate cut was coming, but were growing less certain about what would happen in December.
The fed funds futures market pointed to a 100% chance that policymakers would ease, with just a sliver of a possibility that the cut might hit a half percentage point in September. Market-implied odds were about 99% for a quarter-point move, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tracker of 30-day fed funds futures contracts.
For December, odds of a pause are rising, at 32.6% as of midday Thursday, an increase of about 8 percentage points from a week ago. If the Fed doesn’t skip December, the odds for that happening in January are about 68%, the CME gauge shows.
— Jeff Cox