Fed Chair Jerome Powell answers reporters' questions at the FOMC press conference on July 31, 2024. Photo courtesy of the Federal Reserve

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday set the stage for the central bank’s first rate cut in four years, citing greater progress toward lower inflation as well as a cooler job market that no longer threatens to overheat the economy.

Still, the Fed kept its key interest rate unchanged at a 23-year high of 5.3 percent, despite calls from some economists and Democratic politicians to implement a cut Wednesday. Instead, Powell said that, if inflation continues to fall, “a reduction in our policy rate could be on the table” when the Fed next meets Sept. 17-18.

“We’re getting closer to the point at which it’ll be appropriate to reduce our policy rate,” Powell said, “but we’re not quite at that point.”

A rate cut by the Fed is unlikely to have much immediate impact because it is largely expected by financial markets. Yet over time, lower Fed rates should reduce borrowing costs for consumers and businesses, including mortgage and auto-loan rates.

Rate cuts could also bolster the economy and potentially improve Vice President Kamala Harris’ prospects in the upcoming presidential election. Former President Donald Trump has said the Fed shouldn’t cut rates before the election. After September, the Fed’s next meeting is two days after the election in November.

Question Marks After September Cut

In a statement Wednesday, the Fed said that “job gains have moderated” and acknowledged that the unemployment rate has risen. The Fed is required by Congress to pursue stable prices and maximum employment, and the statement said the central bank is “attentive to the risks” to both goals.

The focus on both inflation and employment is a major shift after several years of Fed officials focusing exclusively on combating rising prices.

“They’re ready to cut, just as long as we don’t get an inflation surprise between now and September, which we won’t,” said Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics. “Better late than never.”

But Powell provided little guidance on how many times the Fed might reduce rates in the coming months.

“I can imagine a scenario in which it would be everywhere from zero cuts to several cuts,” by the end of this year, he said.

Before the Fed’s decision, financial market traders had priced in 100 percent odds that the central bank would reduce its benchmark rate at its September meeting, according to futures markets. The Fed typically seeks to avoid surprising investors with its rate decisions.

Stocks added a bit to earlier gains and Treasury yields eased after the Federal Reserve held its main interest rate at a two-decade high but gave some indication that an easing may soon be on the way. The S&P 500 ended Wednesday up 1.6 percent.

Jobless Claims Resurface Recession Fears

The Fed is seeking to strike a delicate balance: It wants to keep rates high enough for long enough to quell inflation, which has fallen to 2.5 percent from a peak two years ago of 7.1 percent, according to its preferred measure. But it also wants to avoid keeping borrowing costs so high that it triggers a recession.

Powell portrayed the economy as in something of a sweet spot, with inflation falling and hiring occurring at a solid pace. At the same time, wage growth has cooled, which can reduce inflationary pressure in the economy, as many businesses will lift prices to offset higher labor costs.

“It’s neither an overheating economy nor is it a sharply weakening economy,” Powell said. “It’s kind of what you would want to see.”

Earlier Wednesday, a key gauge of wages grew more slowly in the second quarter, compared to the first three months of this year, though the increase was still faster than inflation.

“Wage increases are still at a strong level, but that level continues to come down to a more sustainable level over time,” he said. “That’s exactly the pattern than we want to be seeng.”

Yet with the unemployment rate ticking higher for three months in a row, some economists have raised concerns that the Fed should cut rates more quickly later this year.

The latest jobless claims numbers, for the week ending July 27 and published Thursday morning, hit its highest level in the last year and marked the 10th straight week of elevated jobless claims. Weekly unemployment claims are widely considered as representative of layoffs

“The finish line is in sight and it would be tragic for the Fed to stumble and fall, with one-tenth of a mile left in the marathon, which is what I think they would be doing if they don’t start cutting,” Bharat Ramamurti, an advisor at the American Economic Liberties Project and former economist in the Biden White House, said on a call Monday with reporters.

In the latest piece of good news on price increases, last Friday the government said that yearly inflation fell to 2.5 percent in July, according to the Fed’s preferred inflation measure. That is down from 2.6 percent the previous month and the lowest since February 2021, when inflation was just starting to accelerate.