The Federal Reserve announced that it will cut interest rates by a quarter point for the first time this year - but that probably won’t mean the mortgage rate or car loan you’ve been eyeing will suddenly drop.
Fed rate cuts are one piece of the puzzle in how banks determine loan rates and could contribute to a trend of interest rates slowly decreasing over time.
Here’s what the long-anticipated rate cut means for your mortgage, car loan, savings account and more - and what happened when the Fed cut interest rates in the past.
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What does a Fed rate cut mean?
The Fed’s actionsets the federal funds rate, or the standard rate for how banks borrow money from each other. That means banks can consider charging customers a lower interest rate and still make a profit, because they are paying less to borrow the money in the first place.
But that doesn’t directly change what banks charge customers to borrow money for, say, small-business loans or car loans. The Fed’s rates are short-term, and while it influences longer-term loan rates, it does not control them.
“We’re not going to see mortgage rates, car loans, savings rates, all at once have a step-change down by exactly a quarter-percent,” said Bankrate financial analyst Stephen Kates.