Fed cuts rates again, but Powell raises doubts about easing at next meeting
Source: CNBC
Published Wed, Oct 29 2025 2:00 PM EDT Updated 2 Min Ago
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday approved its second straight interest rate cut, though Chair Jerome Powell rattled markets when he threw doubt on whether another reduction is coming in December.
By a 10-2 vote, the central banks Federal Open Market Committee lowered its benchmark overnight borrowing rate to a range of 3.75%-4%. In addition to the rate move, the Fed announced that it would be ending the reduction of its asset purchases a process known as quantitative tightening on Dec 1.
Governor Stephen Miran again cast a dissenting vote, preferring the Fed move more quickly with a half-point cut. Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid joined Miran in dissenting but for the opposite reason he preferred the Fed not cut at all. Miran is an appointee of President Donald Trump, who has pushed hard on the committee to lower rates quickly. The rate also sets a benchmark for a variety of consumer products such as auto loans, mortgages and credit cards.
The post-meeting statement did not provide any direction on what the committees plans are for December. At the September meeting, officials indicated the likelihood of three total cuts this year. The Fed meets once more in December.
Read more: https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/29/fed-rate-decision-october-2025.html
Article updated.
Previous article/headline -
Fed cuts rates for the second time this year, will end balance sheet run-off in December
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday approved its second straight interest rate cut, a widely expected move that came despite little recent visibility on the economy due to the government shutdown.
By a 10-2 vote, the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee lowered its benchmark overnight borrowing rate to a range of 3.75%-4%. In addition to the rate move, the Fed announced that it would be ending the reduction of its asset purchases - a process known as quantitative tightening - on Dec 1.
Governor Stephen Miran again cast a dissenting vote, preferring the Fed move more quickly with a half-point cut. Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid joined Miran in dissenting but for the opposite reason - he preferred the Fed not cut at all. The rate also sets a benchmark for a variety of consumer products such as auto loans, mortgages and credit cards.
The post-meeting statement did not provide any direction on what the committee's plans are for December. At the September meeting, officials indicated the likelihood of three total cuts this year. The Fed meets once more in December.
Original article -
The Federal Reserve on Wednesday approved its second straight interest rate cut, a widely expected move that came despite little recent visibility on the economy due to the government shutdown.
In addition to the rate move, the Fed announced that it would be ending the reduction of its asset purchases - a process known as quantitative tightening - on Dec 1. By a 10-2 vote, the central bank's Federal Open Market Committee lowered its benchmark overnight borrowing rate to a range of 3.75%-4%.
Governor Stephen Miran again cast a dissenting vote, preferring the Fed move more quickly with a half-point cut. St. Louis Fed President Jeffrey Schmid joined Miran in dissenting but for the opposite reason - he preferred the Fed not cut at all. The rate also sets a benchmark for a variety of consumer products such as auto loans, mortgages and credit cards. The reduction came even though the Fed essentially has been flying blind lately on economic data.
Other than the consumer price index release last week, the government has suspended all data collection and reports, meaning such key measures as nonfarm payrolls, retail sales and a plethora of other macro data is unavailable.
IronLionZion
(50,229 posts)lots of big layoff announcements and consumers buying less ahead of the holiday season.
MAGA doesn't want to release jobs numbers.
Bernardo de La Paz
(60,038 posts)The Fed?
The tRump regime?
The ever-useful never-in-focus "they"?
IronLionZion
(50,229 posts)The MAGA regime would like to hide certain numbers like jobs and unemployment.
Bernardo de La Paz
(60,038 posts)Response to BumRushDaShow (Original post)
GB_RN This message was self-deleted by its author.
Buddyzbuddy
(1,803 posts)The point of the story is the rate cut but CNBC didn't think that might be a good detail to include. Or, did I miss something?
Don't mind me, I'm just griping about everything these days.
Hey Orrex, is he dead yet?
Karma13612
(4,855 posts)google searches:
Courtesy of CNBC:
I added the bolding part above.
It took some digging, and I dont know why all the media were avoiding that crucial detail. Just giving us the final range of 3.75-4.0% didnt give us a clue where it started at!! If it had started at like 6%, that would have been a massive cut.
Hope that helps. It matters to me because I have my 401K retirement in a money market account since I couldnt stomach the stock market after living thru 3 heart stopping crashes since 2000. AFter it was confirmed Trump was the president elect for the 2nd time last November, I made the switch against the advice of my Trump-loving investment advisor. My money keeps edging up a bit at a time now. No more bottoming out . I like that. And it is better than a bank account although not as good as a CD. I might do that down the line.
Buddyzbuddy
(1,803 posts)I made the same move with most of our funds. I'll take $3k a month over an ulcer any day of the week.
BumRushDaShow
(162,561 posts)but what Karma13612 is correct, they seemed to skate over it. Could be because the loons who were shoe-horned into the Fed wanted a 0.50 cut and mentioning that such a cut didn't happen, might have generated wrath from afar!
Bernardo de La Paz
(60,038 posts)All wanted 0.25, except one who wanted no cut, and the loon Miran who wanted 0.5.
BumRushDaShow
(162,561 posts)(from here (PDF) - https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20250917.pdf)
there appears to be a good number looking for at least another quarter drop for the year (whether that had been a 0.5 this time or at least another 0.25 in December).
You can see the outlier!
Bernardo de La Paz
(60,038 posts)Outside of the FOMC in the broader stock and bond markets, the percentage expecting a December rate cut dropped a lot after Powell's press conference, while the percentage expecting a January cut rose slightly.
BumRushDaShow
(162,561 posts)But obviously the employment situation is going to impact this as the tariff inflation has been somewhat slow coming due to those big corps still eating it and only now starting to pass it on, and the small businesses are now going bankrupt, so they drop out of the picture.
Buddyzbuddy
(1,803 posts)durablend
(8,672 posts)Nobody's going to buy a house if the economy goes south, credit card interest rates aren't going to go down if things start looking bleak and that's another hit to saving accounts.
BumRushDaShow
(162,561 posts)Forget the consumers!