Fed Cuts Rates With Three Dissents, Projects One Cut in 2026

Federal Reserve officials delivered a third consecutive interest-rate reduction and maintained their outlook for just one cut in 2026.

The Federal Open Market Committee voted 9-3 Wednesday to lower the benchmark federal funds rate by a quarter point to a range of 3.5%-3.75%. It also subtly altered the wording of its statement suggesting greater uncertainty about when it might cut rates again.

The dissents and the rate projections highlight divisions among policymakers that have emerged over whether weakness in the labor market or stubborn inflation represent the larger danger to the US economy.

In their October statement, the FOMC described what it would take into account “in considering additional adjustments” to their benchmark. In Wednesday’s statement the committee reverted to language used last December — just before a pause in rate cuts — to say “in considering the extent and timing of additional adjustments.”

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The result marked the first time since 2019 that three officials voted against a policy decision, with dissents on both ends of the policy spectrum. The S&P 500 rose while Treasury yields and the dollar declined. No major changes were seen in market expectations for interest-rate cuts in 2026.

Two regional Fed presidents — Austan Goolsbee from Chicago and Jeff Schmid from Kansas City — voted against the decision, preferring to keep rates unchanged. Governor Stephen Miran, whom Trump appointed to the central bank in September, dissented again in favor of a larger, half-point reduction.

Fed officials also authorized fresh purchases of short-term Treasury securities to maintain an “ample” supply of bank reserves.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell will hold a press conference at 2:30 p.m. in Washington.

The decision to lower rates comes after divisions on the committee spilled into public view in recent weeks. Following the last rate cut in October, several officials warned of persistent inflation, indicating their hesitancy to support another reduction. Others remained focused on a weakening labor market, calling for at least one more cut.