Fed likely to hold interest rates steady despite Trump’s pressure

Ahead of next week’s Federal Reserve meeting, relations between President Donald Trump and Fed Chair Jerome Powell have hit a low.
“Families are being hurt because Interest Rates are too high,” Trump wrote in a Truth Social post on Wednesday.
Trump has said he wants the Fed to sharply lower interest rates by as much as 3 percentage points to spur economic growth. (Although the central bank typically adjusts its benchmark in 25-basis-point increments, rates were slashed to near zero as recently as the Covid pandemic. “The Fed only resorts to such extreme measures in response to severe economic distress,” said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.)
The president has argued that maintaining a federal funds rate that is too high makes it harder for businesses and consumers to borrow and puts the U.S. at an economic disadvantage to countries with lower rates.
The Fed’s benchmark sets what banks charge each other for overnight lending, but also has a trickle-down effect on almost all of the borrowing and savings rates Americans see every day.
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Powell said earlier this month that the Fed likely would have cut rates by now, but that it has held off due to the uncertainty and inflation risks posed by Trump’s tariff agenda. Many economists say that the full impact from tariffs on pricing has only just started to be felt, and inflation could pick up in the second half of the year.
Since December, the federal funds rate has remained steady in a target range of 4.25% to 4.5%. Futures market pricing is implying almost no chance of an interest rate cut when the Fed meets next week, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch gauge. Market pricing indicates the Fed is much more likely to consider a rate cut in September.
Once the fed funds rate comes down, consumers could see their borrowing costs start to fall as well.
However, “there is no guarantee this would translate into lower rates,” said Brett House, an economics professor at Columbia Business School — “largely because many types of borrowing, mortgage rates specifically, are not benchmarked off the Fed.”
From mortgage rates and auto loans to credit cards and savings accounts, here’s a look at how the Fed affects your finances.
Mortgages
Trump said in a July 23 social media post that “Housing in our Country is lagging because Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell refuses to lower Interest Rates.”
But fixed mortgage rates, specifically, don’t directly track the Fed: They are largely tied to Treasury yields and the U.S. economy. As concerns over tariffs and the broader economy drive Treasury yields higher, mortgage rates also remain stubbornly high.

The average rate for a 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage is currently near 6.8%, according to Bankrate. The nationwide problem of limited inventory and housing…
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