WSJ Your Money Briefing - What the Fed’s Interest-Rate Cuts Mean for Borrowing and Saving Money
Episode Date: March 17, 2025The Federal Reserve has been lowering interest rates since September, but consumer borrowing costs have stayed stubbornly high, while high-yield savings accounts are paying less. WSJ reporter Imani Mo...ise joins host Julia Carpenter to tell borrowers and savers what to expect for rates on mortgages, credit cards and savings accounts. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Here's your Money Briefing for Monday, March 17th.
I'm Julia Carpenter for The Wall Street Journal.
The Federal Reserve started lowering rates back in September.
So why haven't many consumers felt the relief yet?
So what you're seeing is the Fed is starting to be concerned about the economy.
So they want to cut interest rates to ease things a little bit. However, when they're straining the economy, that means credit risk goes up.
We'll talk with WSJ reporter Imani Moise about how the Fed's rate cuts have and haven't
been affecting mortgages, credit cards, and savings accounts.
That's after the break. When the Federal Reserve cuts interest rates, consumers have historically seen the effects
ripple through different parts of their financial lives.
But lately, those ripple effects aren't as pronounced as they once were.
Wall Street Journal reporter Imani Moise joins me to talk more.
Imani, people tracking interest rate cuts
are presented with a bit of a confusing picture right now.
The Fed has been lowering rates since September,
but consumer borrowing costs have stayed stubbornly high.
So why is that?
So the Fed controls short-term rates
and the same forces that are pushing short-term rates lower are keeping longer-term rates higher.
So what you're seeing is the Fed is starting to be concerned about the economy, so they
want to cut interest rates to ease things a little bit.
However, when there's strain in the economy, that means credit risk goes up.
It's riskier to lend to businesses or certain kinds of consumers.
So you're going to see lenders be a little bit more conservative
and potentially raise rates or keep rates higher
to compensate themselves for that risk.
Thinking about how mortgage rates have been affected
by this environment, and of late we've seen the average rate
on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage hovering around 6.6%,
how have these rates been affected
by the Fed's recent cuts?
Honestly, not much. What we've actually seen since the Fed started lowering rates is that
mortgage rates have moved in the opposite direction. And that's because mortgage rates
tend to track the 10-year Treasury yields much more closely than they track the federal
funds rate. And what we're seeing is that investors, particularly bond investors, are
starting to be more concerned about the economy,
expanding deficits, a potential trade war. So as those concerns are rising, mortgage
rates are going up with them.
And how is that different from what we've seen in years past?
Mortgage rates are much higher than what home buyers have been used to or what home buyers
got used to during the pandemic when rates were near zero. That means it's much, much
more expensive to buy a home today because not only are interest rates higher, home prices are also much higher as
well. When it comes to credit cards, we know that in theory these rate cuts should mean lower credit
card APRs for consumers, but you discovered in your reporting that credit card rates are staying
high. So why is that? Yeah, they start to come down a very little bit.
But most borrowers aren't going to feel a difference because the rates are still near historic highs.
And that's because when the Federal Reserve rises rates, credit card interest rates tend to rise very quickly.
When the Fed cuts, they fall much slower because, again, the Fed tends to cut rates when it's concerned about the economy,
which means that there's more risk, which means it's harder for borrowers to repay loans and banks are going to price
that risk into the way that they price their credit cards.
So what do financial advisors and other experts say those struggling to pay their balances
right now should do in coming months?
The first thing that you should do is look around to see if you could refinance your
debt for a lower rate.
The best option is going to be a zero interest balance transfer offer
which is still on the market and if you can't find one of those even refinancing
to a personal loan can lower that interest rate for you and make repaying
that debt more manageable without having to worry about ballooning interest
payments. So we've talked about mortgage rates, we've talked about credit card
APRs.
Next I want to ask you about savings accounts.
We're seeing the national savings rate increase, which means more and more people are stockpiling
cash, but are banks passing on these rate cuts to savers?
Yes.
As a matter of fact, savings account yields have been the most responsive to Fed rate
cuts so far.
For the most part, especially high-yield savings accounts,
those rates have moved in lockstep with the Fed.
Unfortunately, if you're a saver in this economy,
it means you're gonna earn a little bit less.
But on the bright side, if you moved your money
to a high-yield savings account during the pandemic,
you're still going to be earning a lot more
than if you left your money in maybe a standard saving account at one of the large chain banks that tend to pay less than 1%.
And lastly, Imani, thinking about the future, you talked to investors who said they're forecasting
Fed interest rates to drop later this year.
So what could that mean for consumers?
So the analysts I spoke to said that they wouldn't hold their breath for interest rates on mortgages
or credit cards to fall later this year.
If you're holding out trying to buy a home, sooner is always better than later because
if rates do go down, you can refinance.
And credit card interest rates, you'll have to be aggressive in paying them down and you
can call your bank to negotiate a lower rate,
it's not going to make a material difference in how much interest you're going to pay
in the long run.
So just pay that down as soon as possible or refinance.
And unfortunately, we're entering a lower interest rate environment.
So if you're a saver, get comfortable with the fact that it's not going to be as lucrative
to keep your money doing nothing as it was a few years ago.
That's WSJ Reporter Imani Moise.
And that's it for your money briefing.
We'll be back tomorrow with WSJ's Ashlea Ebeling to go over some tax season to-dos
for anyone with a side hustle.
This episode was produced by Ariana Asparu with supervising producer Melanie Roy and
deputy editor Chris Sinseley.
I'm Julia Carpenter for the Wall Street Journal.
Thanks for listening.