Federal Reserve
The Federal Reserve started a rate-cutting cycle on Sept. 18, 2025, lowering its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points (bps) to a range of 4.75% to 5%. The cut was the first since March 2020 after the Fed raised interest rates to a 23-year high point to cool the economy and quell inflation. The Fed cut rates two more times in 2024, each by 25 basis points. It has not cut interest rates so far in 2025.
Latest Posts
Did we reach the peak for mortgage rates this year?
Sep 03, 2023We had a crazy jobs week last week, with tons of data that should please the Fed, but does that mean we’ve hit peak mortgage rates for 2023?
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Why the Fed is celebrating after jobs week
Sep 01, 2023 -
August unemployment jumps to 3.8% as labor cools
Sep 01, 2023 -
PCE price index, a key inflation measure, rose modestly in July
Aug 31, 2023 -
New mortgage rule could harm efforts to close racial homeownership gap
Aug 31, 2023 -
Mortgage rates drop but still at 22-year high
Aug 31, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: Is this what the Fed wanted?
Aug 31, 2023 -
In July, job openings declined to pre-pandemic level
Aug 29, 2023 -
Single-family rent increases 3.3% year over year in June: CoreLogic
Aug 28, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: should we expect more Fed rate hikes?
Aug 28, 2023 -
Logan Mohtashami: should we expect more Fed rate hikes?
Aug 28, 2023 -
Housing sector is showing signs of picking back up: Powell
Aug 25, 2023