Fed Holds Rates Near Zero As Presidential Election Results Remain Uncertain

Fed Holds Rates Near Zero As Presidential Election Results Remain Uncertain

Fed Holds Rates Near Zero As Presidential Election Results Remain Uncertain Bankrate Caret RightMain Menu Mortgage Mortgages Financing a home purchase Refinancing your existing loan Finding the right lender Additional Resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Bank Banking Compare Accounts Use calculators Get advice Bank reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Credit Card Credit cards Compare by category Compare by credit needed Compare by issuer Get advice Looking for the perfect credit card? Narrow your search with CardMatch Caret RightMain Menu Loan Loans Personal Loans Student Loans Auto Loans Loan calculators Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Invest Investing Best of Brokerages and robo-advisors Learn the basics Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Home Equity Home equity Get the best rates Lender reviews Use calculators Knowledge base Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Loan Home Improvement Real estate Selling a home Buying a home Finding the right agent Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Insurance Insurance Car insurance Homeowners insurance Other insurance Company reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Retirement Retirement Retirement plans & accounts Learn the basics Retirement calculators Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Advertiser Disclosure

Advertiser Disclosure

We are an independent, advertising-supported comparison service. Our goal is to help you make smarter financial decisions by providing you with interactive tools and financial calculators, publishing original and objective content, by enabling you to conduct research and compare information for free - so that you can make financial decisions with confidence.
Bankrate has partnerships with issuers including, but not limited to, American Express, Bank of America, Capital One, Chase, Citi and Discover.

How We Make Money

The offers that appear on this site are from companies that compensate us. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site, including, for example, the order in which they may appear within the listing categories. But this compensation does not influence the information we publish, or the reviews that you see on this site. We do not include the universe of companies or financial offers that may be available to you. SHARE: Mandel Ngan/Getty Images November 05, 2020 Sarah Foster covers the Federal Reserve, the U.S. economy and economic policy. She previously worked for Bloomberg News, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Daily Herald. Brian Beers is the managing editor for the Wealth team at Bankrate. He oversees editorial coverage of banking, investing, the economy and all things money. Bankrate logo

The Bankrate promise

At Bankrate we strive to help you make smarter financial decisions. While we adhere to strict editorial integrity, this post may contain references to products from our partners. Here's an explanation for how we make money. Bankrate logo

The Bankrate promise

Founded in 1976, Bankrate has a long track record of helping people make smart financial choices. We’ve maintained this reputation for over four decades by demystifying the financial decision-making process and giving people confidence in which actions to take next. Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. All of our content is authored by and edited by , who ensure everything we publish is objective, accurate and trustworthy. Our banking reporters and editors focus on the points consumers care about most — the best banks, latest rates, different types of accounts, money-saving tips and more — so you can feel confident as you’re managing your money. Bankrate logo

Editorial integrity

Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that we’re putting your interests first. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions. Here is a list of our .

Key Principles

We value your trust. Our mission is to provide readers with accurate and unbiased information, and we have editorial standards in place to ensure that happens. Our editors and reporters thoroughly fact-check editorial content to ensure the information you’re reading is accurate. We maintain a firewall between our advertisers and our editorial team. Our editorial team does not receive direct compensation from our advertisers.

Editorial Independence

Bankrate’s editorial team writes on behalf of YOU – the reader. Our goal is to give you the best advice to help you make smart personal finance decisions. We follow strict guidelines to ensure that our editorial content is not influenced by advertisers. Our editorial team receives no direct compensation from advertisers, and our content is thoroughly fact-checked to ensure accuracy. So, whether you’re reading an article or a review, you can trust that you’re getting credible and dependable information. Bankrate logo

How we make money

You have money questions. Bankrate has answers. Our experts have been helping you master your money for over four decades. We continually strive to provide consumers with the expert advice and tools needed to succeed throughout life’s financial journey. Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that our content is honest and accurate. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions. The content created by our editorial staff is objective, factual, and not influenced by our advertisers. We’re transparent about how we are able to bring quality content, competitive rates, and useful tools to you by explaining how we make money. Bankrate.com is an independent, advertising-supported publisher and comparison service. We are compensated in exchange for placement of sponsored products and, services, or by you clicking on certain links posted on our site. Therefore, this compensation may impact how, where and in what order products appear within listing categories. Other factors, such as our own proprietary website rules and whether a product is offered in your area or at your self-selected credit score range can also impact how and where products appear on this site. While we strive to provide a wide range offers, Bankrate does not include information about every financial or credit product or service. The Federal Reserve left interest rates alone and deferred making any major changes to policy, staying on the sidelines during an intense period of Washington drama as the winner of the U.S. presidential election has yet to be determined. The Fed’s policymaking arm decided to keep its overnight lending rate pegged at its lowest levels ever, in a target range of 0-0.25 percent. For consumers, it means more downward pressure on and yields, while borrowing rates for auto loans, credit cards and are likely to edge lower, if at all. “Economic activity and employment have continued to recover but remain well below their levels at the beginning of the year,” Fed officials wrote in their post-meeting statement released on Thursday. “The Federal Reserve is committed to using its full range of tools to support the U.S. economy in this challenging time, thereby promoting its maximum employment and price stability goals.” The move was universally expected, even as Fed officials underscore concerns about the U.S. economy requiring more stimulus if it’s going to have a shot at fully rebounding from the worst downturn since the Great Depression. With virus cases surging again across the U.S., reaching their highest levels since the global health crisis first began in March, a second wave of infections is also . “The Fed is perfectly content to fly under the radar this week,” says Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate chief financial analyst. “The risks to the economic recovery have increased since the Fed last met in September, with rising coronavirus cases, slower job growth, a lack of new stimulus for consumers and small businesses, and now an unresolved presidential election. The Fed has done what they can do at this point, despite saying they have a range of tools still available.”

Economy s coronavirus rebound continues but pace is slowing

Experts foresaw Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell & Co. laying low even before Election Day began, a voting process that was expected to take longer than in years past amid the unprecedented coronavirus pandemic that’s sent demand for absentee and mail-in ballots soaring. Former Vice President Joe Biden’s path to the White House looks much more certain than President Donald Trump’s at this point, but the results are still too soon to call with delays in vote counts from key swing states including Nevada, Arizona, Georgia and Pennsylvania. Even if Biden is chosen as president, Republicans look fairly likely to maintain control of the Senate, which might dampen the prospect of a bigger fiscal care package comparable to the CARES Act passed in March. When asked about the results of the election, Powell reiterated that officials don’t make interest rate decisions based on any one outcome. The election “comes up now and again but it is not at all a central focus of the meeting,” Powell said. “It is a good time to step back and let the institutions of our democracy do their jobs.” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi in mid-October had made their most concerted effort to bridge the gap between both Republican and Democrats in months, but those talks broke down over lingering policy differences.

Stimulus plans for the economy

Powell has underscored that Americans might be most helped through fiscal aid, rather than the Fed’s traditionally blunt instrument. Still, if the Fed wants to stimulate the economy and provide households with more support, experts say it can adjust the composition of its bond-buying program to be in a position that stimulates the economy, rather than stabilize market functioning. The Fed’s programs have had little take up so far, though they’ve provided a significant backstop to credit markets. Experts say the Fed might be able to adjust terms of those programs to be more flexible and lenient with risk taking, allowing for more participation. That would provide the economy with more support, though it would have to be approved by Mnuchin. The last major economic release showed gross domestic product (GDP) — the broadest measure of the financial system’s strength — rebounding at record strength, though it wasn’t enough to offset declines in the first three months of 2020. The U.S. economy is still about 3.5 percent smaller than it was before the pandemic, and officials aren’t expecting it to get fully back on track until at least 2021, according to . The Labor Department’s widely watched jobs report for October will be released less than a day after officials’ interest rate announcement. Job gains are expected to slow to 590,000 in the month, according to a Bloomberg survey of economists, and unemployment is expected to edge down slightly to 7.6 percent from 7.9 percent. One of the biggest concerns is that the Fed might be running low on ammunition to help prod the economy back to life. Powell stressed that the Fed isn’t out of ammo, and there is still more the Fed could technically do. But those steps won’t address the overall cause of the volatility and uncertainty, nor will it replace lost demand that might be holding firms back from hiring more workers. “The credit channels remain open, and those are all very important, but at the end of the day, all that can do is encourage lending and spending,” says Steven Friedman, senior macroeconomist at MacKay Shields. “While they can adjust their purchase program as necessary to support the recovery, it’s really much less effective than fiscal policy at this point.”

What this means for you

Americans have likely already been taking prudent financial steps, almost eight months into the coronavirus crisis. Those include cutting back on expenses as much as possible and — a cash cushion that experts typically recommend to account for three to six months of individuals’ expenses. At this point, however, Congressional actions are going to be the biggest game changer for consumers. Fiscal policymakers’ most powerful steps so far to help Americans get through the pandemic have been direct payments of $1,200 (or more) and a supplemental $600 boost to weekly unemployment checks. That provision, however, expired in July, while a separate $300 temporary unemployment insurance (UI) enhancement through an executive order from President Donald Trump has mostly already expired across the U.S. At the same time, about , according to the IRS. If you’ve received notice about having an unclaimed check or are still waiting for your money to arrive, be sure to . Consumers will benefit from shopping around for competitive rates, with interest rates likely holding at historic lows for years to come. Meanwhile, homeowners looking to refinance could shave hundreds of dollars off of their monthly payments, freeing up more change to use for other purposes. Those rates have consistently fallen each week, thanks in part to the Fed’s efforts to keep interest rates at historic lows through its massive bond-buying programs. If consumers refinance, they should consider allocating that extra money to their savings fund. “Mortgage rates are still at record low levels, so the window of opportunity for homeowners to refinance remains wide open,” McBride says. “This can generate hundreds of dollars of savings each month and tens of thousands of dollars in savings over the life of the loan.” Americans facing hardship or job loss should also , to see if they can work out some sort of forbearance program. Experts say it’s always worth a shot to ask.

Learn more

Here’s what to do if you’re still jobless by the time your coronavirus unemployment benefits run out SHARE: Sarah Foster covers the Federal Reserve, the U.S. economy and economic policy. She previously worked for Bloomberg News, the Chicago Tribune and the Chicago Daily Herald. Brian Beers is the managing editor for the Wealth team at Bankrate. He oversees editorial coverage of banking, investing, the economy and all things money.

Related Articles

Share:
0 comments

Comments (0)

Leave a Comment

Minimum 10 characters required

* All fields are required. Comments are moderated before appearing.

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Fed Holds Rates Near Zero As Presidential Election Results Remain Uncertain | Trend Now | Trend Now