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The Federal Reserve and Your Money

Interest rates are a little lower than they used to be, but they’re still near the highest levels in over a decade. Here’s what it means for your wallet.

The latest on the Fed from Bankrate’s experts

“It is tempting to romanticize the idea of lower interest rates, particularly from a borrowing perspective. But the reason for lower interest rates is very important. We want interest rates to come down because inflation pressures are easing, not because the economy is weakening.”

– Greg McBride, CFA

Fed skips another interest rate cut, warns of ‘potential’ for stagflation

The Federal Reserve voted on Wednesday to keep interest rates steady for the third consecutive meeting even while acknowledging that unemployment could increase, a decision that signals officials are more concerned about inflation than the possibility of a recession.
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Recent interest rate trends

Every time the Federal Reserve adjusts interest rates, borrowing and savings rates move in lockstep. Compare Bankrate data to see how the latest Fed decision is impacting rates on key consumer products.

Experts in all things finance

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About Bankrate
Greg McBride

Greg McBride, CFA Arrow Right Icon

Chief Financial Analyst

Sarah Foster

Sarah Foster Arrow Right Icon

Principal U.S. Economy Reporter

Mark Hamrick

Mark Hamrick Arrow Right Icon

Senior Economic Analyst

Latest articles

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The Fed’s rate hold means loans costs are sticking. Here’s what it means for your business.
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Bankrate’s experts are reacting live to the Fed’s latest interest rate decision.
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The key benchmark has been as high as 20 percent — and as low as 0 percent.
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Every financial decision you make is impacted by the Federal Reserve.
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You might not feel better about inflation because prices are still up post-pandemic.
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Stagflation is an economic “super villain,” bringing high inflation and unemployment.
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Prices rise and fall all the time in the U.S. economy. It’s not always inflation.
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Fed officials, however, are uncertain about how many times they’ll be able to cut borrowing costs in 2025.
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The Fed is expected to cut interest rates a third time. Here’s what to watch.
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Economists see a slower job market in the year ahead but recession odds remain low.
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Tune in to Bankrate’s live coverage of the Fed’s first rate cut since 2020.
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Rate cuts are coming. Just don’t call this a low-rate environment just yet.
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As the job market weakens, some economists say the Fed should’ve cut rates already.
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