Federal Reserve cuts key rate for first time this year
[September 18, 2025] By
CHRISTOPHER RUGABER
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Federal Reserve cut its key interest rate by a
quarter-point Wednesday and projected it would do so twice more this
year as concern grows at the central bank about the health of the
nation's labor market.
The move is the Fed’s first cut since December and lowered its
short-term rate to about 4.1%, down from 4.3%. Fed officials, led by
Chair Jerome Powell, had kept their rate unchanged this year as they
evaluated the impact of tariffs, tighter immigration enforcement, and
other Trump administration policies on inflation and the economy.
Yet the central bank’s focus has shifted quickly from inflation, which
remains modestly above its 2% target, to jobs, as hiring has grounded
nearly to a halt in recent months and the unemployment rate has ticked
higher. Lower interest rates could reduce borrowing costs for mortgages,
car loans, and business loans, and boost growth and hiring.
“It’s really the risks that we’re seeing to the labor market that were
the focus of today’s decision," Powell said at a press conference
following the Fed's two-day meeting.
Still, Powell did not lay the groundwork for a rapid series of cuts,
disappointing some investors. Fed officials, in a set of projections
also released Wednesday, signaled that they expect to reduce their key
rate twice more this year, but just once in 2026. Before the meeting,
investors on Wall Street had projected five cuts for the rest of this
year and next.
And Powell noted that the committee was pretty evenly split on whether
to cut rates once or twice more this year. As a result, he said that the
projected cuts should be seen as more a “probability” than a
“certainty.”

Powell and the Fed “wanted to be noncommital, wanted to be careful, and
wanted to be data dependent and keep all their options open for future
policy,” said Matt Luzzetti, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank.
The broad S&P 500 stock index ticked down 0.1% by the close of trading,
while the Nasdaq also fell. The Dow Jones industrial average moved up
0.5%.
Just one Fed policymaker dissented from the decision: Stephen Miran, who
President Donald Trump appointed and was confirmed by the Senate in a
rushed vote late Monday just hours before the meeting began. Miran
preferred a larger half-point cut, but Powell told reporters there
wasn't “very much support” for the bigger-size cut among Fed officials.
Many economists had forecast there would be additional dissents, and the
meeting's outcome suggests that Powell was able to patch together a show
of unity from a committee that includes Miran and two other Trump
appointees from his first term, as well as a Fed governor, Lisa Cook,
whom Trump is seeking to fire.
Still, there were still significant differences among the 19 officials
on the Fed's rate-setting committee about where the Fed should go next.
Seven policymakers indicated they don't support any further cuts, while
two supported just one more and 10 favor at least two more. One official
— likely Miran — indicated that they would support several large cuts to
bring the Fed's rate to 2.9% by year's end. Fed officials submit their
forecasts of future rate moves anonymously.

[to top of second column] |

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell walks off after a news
conference following the Federal Open Market Committee meeting,
Wednesday, Sept. 17, 2025, at the Federal Reserve Board Building in
Washington. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
 Powell said the wide divergence
reflects the uncertain outlook for the economy, given that inflation
remains stubborn even as hiring has stumbled.
“There are no risk-free paths now,” Powell said. “It's not
incredibly obvious what to do.”
The Fed is facing both a challenging economic environment and
threats to its traditional independence from day-to-day politics. At
the same time that hiring has weakened, inflation remains stubbornly
elevated. It rose 2.9% in August from a year ago, according to the
consumer price index, up from 2.7% in July and noticeably above the
Fed’s 2% target.
It’s unusual to have weaker hiring and elevated inflation, because
typically a slowing economy causes consumers to pull back on
spending, cooling price hikes. Powell suggested last month that
sluggish growth could keep inflation in check even if tariffs lift
prices further.
Separately, Trump’s attempted firing of Cook is the first time a
president has tried to remove a Fed governor in the central bank’s
112-year history, and has been seen by many legal scholars as an
unprecedented attack on the Fed’s independence. His administration
has accused Cook of mortgage fraud, but the accusation has come in
the context of Trump’s extensive criticism of Powell and the Fed for
not cutting rates much faster and steeper.
An appeals court late Monday upheld an earlier ruling that the
firing violated Cook’s due process rights. A lower court had also
previously ruled that Trump did not provide sufficient justification
to remove Cook. Also late Monday, the Senate voted to approve
Miran’s nomination, and he was quickly sworn in Tuesday morning.
On Tuesday, Trump said Fed officials “have to make their own choice”
on rates but added that “they should listen to smart people like
me.” Trump has said the Fed should reduce rates by three full
percentage points.

When asked what the signs would be that the Fed is no longer
functioning independent of political pressure, Powell said, “I don’t
believe we’ll ever get to that place. We’re doing our work exactly
as we always have now.”
The Fed’s move to cut rates puts it in a different spot from many
other central banks overseas. Last week, the European Central Bank
left its benchmark rate unchanged, as inflation has largely cooled
and the economy has seen limited damage, so far, from U.S. tariffs.
On Friday, the Bank of England is also expected to keep its rate on
hold as inflation, at 3.8%, remains higher than in the United
States.
___
AP Business Writer Alex Veiga in Los Angeles contributed to this
report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved |