Divided Fed holds key interest rate steady, defying Trump's demands for aggressive cuts
Source: CNBC
Published Wed, Jul 30 20252:00 PM EDTUpdated 1 Min Ago
WASHINGTON A divided Federal Reserve on Wednesday voted to keep its benchmark interest rate steady, despite a barrage of criticism from President Donald Trump and dissents from two top officials.
The Federal Open Market Committee, the group that sets the overnight borrowing rate, voted 9-2 to stay on hold. The federal funds rate will continue to be set in a range between 4.25%-4.5%. The level sets what banks charge each other for overnight lending, but influences a slew of other rates across the economy.
However, the decision met opposition from governors Michelle Bowman and Christopher Waller, both of whom have advocated for the Fed to start easing in acknowledgement that inflation is under control and the labor market could start weakening soon. This was the first time since late 1993 that multiple governors cast no votes on a rate decision.
The post-meeting statement offered only a couple changes in how the committee views economic conditions.
Read more: https://www.cnbc.com/2025/07/30/fed-leaves-interest-rates-unchanged-as-expected.html

CountAllVotes
(21,919 posts)Last edited Wed Jul 30, 2025, 02:45 PM - Edit history (1)
My settlement just came through and I'm looking to put most of the funds back into my IRA where they came from.
I should be able to get something half-way decent in an IRA CD for the next 12 months.
1 Year
3.05% compounded = 3.10%
I realize its not great but its better than less if they were to cut rates!
Thank you for doing a great job Jerome Powell!
progree
(12,135 posts)One can't pull money out of an IRA and then put it back in. Once one withdraws money from the IRA, it's out of the IRA, full stop (and one must pay taxes on the IRA withdrawal unless it's from a Roth).
Any money put into an IRA (whether it came from an IRA withdrawal or from somewhere else) is counted as a new contribution, and must meet the max annual limit on IRA contributions, and an IRA contribution cannot exceed earned income for the year, among other conditions.
Disclosure: I'm not a tax or IRA expert. I just don't want to see you fined for making an illegal IRA contribution.
Ray Bruns
(5,447 posts)
LetMyPeopleVote
(166,964 posts)The central bank has said Trumps tariffs are making it difficult for it to lower rates, something that would otherwise be called for amid signs of slowing economic activity.
Trump gonna be MAD.
— ðPennyDonâtPlayThat (@pennydontplaythat.bsky.social) 2025-07-30T18:09:47.278Z
Bigly. ð¤£ð
Federal Reserve holds key interest rate steady as it monitors Trump's tariff policy www.nbcnews.com/business/eco...
https://www.nbcnews.com/business/economy/federal-reserve-interest-rate-decision-july-2025-what-to-know-rcna222028
In a statement announcing the decision, the Fed said economic growth had moderated in the first half of the year but that inflation remained somewhat elevated.
Two Federal Reserve officials, both appointed by President Donald Trump, dissented from the decision, something that has not occurred in more than three decades in a sign of both the economic uncertainty and political pressure facing the central bank.
Ahead of the announcement, traders had put the odds of the Fed maintaining the current rate of about 4.5% at a near certainty despite enormous pressure from the Trump administration to lower it.
Trump has argued for lower rates in hopes of improving economic growth, arguing there is no inflation, while Fed officials have signaled the presidents tariffs are returning price pressures into the economy and thus require putting a lid on consumption and investment, in part by holding back on interest rate cuts.
bucolic_frolic
(51,626 posts)Businesses so fragile they worry about 4.5%. Must be great businesses.
LetMyPeopleVote
(166,964 posts)Powell: "Increased tariffs are pushing up prices in some categories of goods. Near-term measures of inflation expectations have moved up on balance over the course of this year on news about tariffs."
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) 2025-07-30T18:36:44.956Z
ProudMNDemocrat
(19,961 posts)And rates of return on savings and checking accounts. In addition to lending rates for loans and mortgages.
I have Investment and high yield savings accounts, in addition to other income since my husband passed away. I generate income through my sewing business as well.
progree
(12,135 posts)Two Trump appointees.
I dissent. Last CPI report:
https://www.democraticunderground.com/10143496078

News report from the source: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm
CPI data series: https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SA0
CORE CPI data series: http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CUSR0000SA0L1E
I annualize everything to be comparable to each other and to compare to the Fed's 2% target
They are calculated using the actual index values, not from the rounded off monthly change numbers.
The CPI rise averaged 2.4% over the past 3 months on an annualized basis (core CPI: 2.4%)
The June one month increase annualized is: CPI: 3.5%, (core CPI: 2.8%)
REGULAR CPI

CORE CPI

Both the CPI and Core CPI 3 month rolling average were helped a lot when the huge January increases dropped out of the 3-month window, and were hurt a lot when the March decrease for the CPI and the tiny increase for the Core CPI dropped out of the window.
The rolling 12 months averages graphs are in the OP. They were hurt by last year's very small June 2024 month-over-month increases dropping out of the 12 month window. What drops out of the window is just as important as what enters the 12 month window (which is the latest, June 2025).
Some featured items from the BLS news summary https://www.bls.gov/news.release/cpi.nr0.htm
Increases in June over May:
Shelter: +0.2%, Energy: +0.9%, Gasoline: +1.0%, Food and food at home: +0.3%, Food way from home: +0.4%,
12 month increases:
Energy: -0.8%, Food: +3.0%
Bar graph of increases and decreases of various CPI components arranged from highest increase to lowest and then decreases, 12 month numbers (year-over-year)
https://finance.yahoo.com/personal-finance/banking/article/june-inflation-breakdown-consumers-feel-the-pinch-with-tariffs-looming-181129115.html
Household energy +7.1%
Auto insurance: +6.1%
Housing: +4.0%
Restaurant meals: +3.8%
. . .
Hotel rooms: -2.5%
Electronics: -3.3%
Airfare -3.5%
Gasoline: -8.3%
==========================================
We get a look at PCE inflation for June tomorrow, the Fed's favorite inflation gauge. I don't expect it to be as high as the CPI report was, because it seldom is. That's partly or mostly because the PCE is a "chained" index which means that, for example, if enough consumers switch from beef to turkey necks and other lower-cost kinds of meat, then it will show up as a decrease in meat prices in the PCE. That's because chained types of indices fully include substitution effects.
One other thing comes to mind: the PCE puts LESS weight on shelter than the CPI does. Shelter increases have been high relative to most other components, so this tends to make the PCE come out lower than the CPI.
The estimate for tomorrow's PCE June over May increases are +0.3% for both the regular and the core numbers (those are about 3.6% when annualized, which is kinda hot), but I doubt they will be that high, again because of the substitution effect.
progree
(12,135 posts)I always thought that was the key feature of the meeting, besides the current interest rate decision itself and the Powell press conference a half hour later.
Last time they projected 2 interest rate cuts before the end of the year.... and a certain number next year ...
Nothing in the article about any dot plot.
BumRushDaShow
(157,335 posts)when I decided to sub to MarketWatch, I went on and picked up Barron's too (at a discount with the MarketWatch). And per them, that plot is apparently done quarterly, with their Summary of Economic Projections report. The last report released was in June (6/18/25) (PDF) - https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/files/fomcprojtabl20250618.pdf
So they are apparently released in March, June, September, December.
The tool is highly watched and frequently misinterpreted. Here's a complete guide.
By Molly Cook Escobar
Jun 18, 2025, 8:51 AM EDT
Where does the Federal Reserve see interest rates heading? You can find the answer yourselfif you know where to look.
The Federal Reserve's primary functions are to keep prices stable and maintain full employment. Adjusting interest rates is one way the central bank achieves those goals: Higher rates increase the cost of borrowing for Americans and businesses and tend to reduce demand, while lower rates can have the opposite effect.
Members of the Federal Reserve's policymaking arm meet eight times a year to potentially make changes to short-term rates based on trends in inflation, the labor market, and other aspects of the economy.
Four times a year, the group publishes its Summary of Economic Projections, which includes a chart that shows where each of the Federal Open Market Committee's 19 policymakers expect interest rates to be over the next several years and in the long term. Each members anonymous forecast is represented by a single dot, hence why it is called the Feds dot plot.
(snip)
Snapshot of one that the NYT had last month (for the 6/18/25 one) -

progree
(12,135 posts)BumRushDaShow
(157,335 posts)
ananda
(32,659 posts)Well, as long as we have the dollar anyay.