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What you need to know today
A jumbo-sized 50-point cut
The U.S. Federal Reserve slashed rates by half a percentage point, bringing the federal funds rate to 4.75%–5%. Federal Open Market Committee members see the rate falling to 4.25%–4.5% by the end of this year, meaning another half-point cut before 2025. Members also raised their estimation of the unemployment rate this year to 4.4% from the 4% projected in June.
Rate cut didn't boost markets
U.S. markets popped on the Fed's 50-point cut but couldn't maintain their gains. On Wednesday, the S&P lost 0.29%, the Dow fell 0.25% and the Nasdaq dipped 0.31%. Europe's regional Stoxx 600 index lost 0.5%. The U.K.'s FTSE 100 dropped 0.68% as data showed the country's headline CPI for August remaining at 2.2%, the same as July's figure.
Global repercussions of cut
The Fed's loosening of U.S. monetary policy doesn't just affect the country's borrowing rate. It affects the decision of central banks all around the world and will move assets, ranging from currencies to bonds to commodities. CNBC's Jenni Reid looks at how Wednesday's rate cut will cause tectonic shifts in assets globally.
Presidential prediction
U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris is more likely to win the presidential election than former President Donald Trump, according to a CNBC survey. Out of the 27 respondents, who comprise investment strategists, economists and fund managers, 48% think Harris has a greater chance of winning, 41% think it's Trump, while 11% are unsure.
[PRO] Options on gold
We've been talking a lot about how stocks could be affected by the Fed's interest rate cut. But don't neglect gold, which tends to rise as rates fall because it becomes more attractive to investors. Don't let its expensive price per ounce deter you, either. Here's how to use options on gold to play the Fed decision.
Money Report
The bottom line
The futures market was right.
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Just before the Fed meeting, it was pricing in a 64% chance of a 50-basis-points cut, according to the CME FedWatch tool. By contrast, the prevailing sentiment among experts was that a 25-point cut was more likely, according to a CNBC survey.
Such predictions can be seen as a wholly disinterested affair. That is, the forecast is based on an objective consideration of the state of the economy, balanced against the risk of inflation.
Those predictions can also express hope, which can embody a desire without having evidence to back it up.
And when that hope is fulfilled, markets can have a moment of panic.
After touching record highs as the Fed's jumbo-sized cut was announced, the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average ended the day in the red. So did the Nasdaq Composite.
It's difficult to understand what happened there, since markets are so driven by sentiment that sometimes defy explanation or evidence.
That might have been at the back of Fed Chair Jerome Powell's head. And he was likely aware that a bigger-than-usual cut might connote that the Fed's worried about the economy.
So, Powell spent a big portion of the post-meeting press conference massaging sentiment.
"I don't see anything in the economy right now that suggests that the likelihood of a recession, sorry, of a downturn, is elevated," Powell said.
Why, then, did the Fed decide not to leave cuts at 25 basis points?
As if anticipating worries, Powell said in his opening statement that the decision marked a "recalibration" of policy. In other words, the Fed's jumbo cut is a sign the central bank is taking the lead in charting monetary policy, and not reacting belatedly to economic conditions.
Investors will take some time to digest Powell's assurances. Markets, after all, are largely irrational creatures.
– CNBC's Jeff Cox, Yun Li, Hakyung Kim and Samantha Subin contributed to this story.