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The Federal Reserve delivered the much-anticipated 25 basis point rate cut on Wednesday, bringing the Fed Funds rate down to 4.25%- 4.5%, levels seen in December 2022.
Although this is the third consecutive rate reduction since the central bank started easing the rates this year, the policy came with a cautionary tone. Cleveland Fed President Beth M. Hammack was the lone dissenter, preferring to maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 4.5% to 4.75%.
Wednesday’s development brings the total rate reduction to 1% this year. According to a CNBC report that cited the dot plot matrix of the Fed, the central bank has indicated 2025 will witness only two more rate reductions.
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The central bank has also increased its projection for the change in real GDP for 2024 to 2.5% compared to 2% projected in September. However, for the longer term, it has maintained its projection of 1.8%.
Unemployment rate projections have been brought down to 4.2% compared to 4.4% projected in September. The Fed has also raised its PCE inflation expectation to 2.4% for 2024, marginally higher than the 2.3% projected in September.
Core PCE inflation expectations stand at 2.8%, slightly higher than the earlier expectation of 2.6%.
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Following the policy announcement, benchmark U.S. indices sold off, with the S&P 500 falling 0.66% and the Nasdaq Composite sliding 0.72%.
According to CNBC, the Dow is set for its first 10-day losing streak since 1974 following the Fed’s hint of fewer rate cuts next year.
The SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and the Invesco QQQ Trust, Series 1 (QQQ) were trading lower, with retail sentiments ranging from ‘bullish’ to ‘neutral.’
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Also See: Sezzle Stock Tumbles 21% On Hindenburg’s Short Report: Retail Chatter Shows Mixed Opinion
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