What does a cut mean for mortgages, car loans, and other debt?
The Federal Reserve’s key lending rate – what it charges banks to borrow – sets a base for what companies charge people in the US for loans, like mortgages, or other debt, like unpaid credit card balances.
That rate has hovered around 5.3% for more than a year, the highest level since 2001, since jumping from near zero at the start of 2022.
A cut will bring some welcome relief to borrowers, though it will likely mean that some banks knock down the rates they are offering savers too.
Mortgage rates in the US have already dropped a bit, partially in anticipation of the move.
What could the global impact be?
Americans will be most directly affected by a change. But central banks with currencies tied to the dollar often link their rate decisions to the Fed, such as Hong Kong and many Gulf states, so borrowers in those countries will also see an impact.
For the many people outside of the US invested in the US stock market, a cut is also likely good news.
Lower interest rates tend to boost stock prices for two reasons.
First, it means companies can borrow debt for less money and reinvest it to make the business more profitable.
Second, lower rates mean savings accounts and some other kinds of investments become less attractive, so investors tend to move their money towards things like stocks.
Why might the Fed cut rates this time?
Compared to other central banks, the Fed is a bit late to the rate-cutting party.
Europe, the UK, New Zealand, and Canada have cut rates already, and so have many banks in emerging markets.
Those banks all had their own reasons for cutting rates, and how low the Fed decides to go depends a bit on what’s pushing it to act.
The Fed raises or cuts rates in response to two factors: inflation and employment.
In 2022, when the Fed started raising interest rates, officials were focussed on inflation and wanted to get consumer prices, then rising at the fastest pace since the 1980s, to stabilise.
A jump in rates tends to bring down prices by making it harder to borrow, so people spend less on everything from consumer goods to homes and business equipment.
But less demand also means the economy isn’t growing as quickly, and if it slows too much and actually starts contracting then that’s a recession.
In the past, the US economy has often entered recession after a series of rate hikes, costing millions of people their jobs.
And over the last year, unemployment in the US has been ticking higher, as hiring slows sharply.
So is the Fed cutting rates because it has triumphed in its fight against inflation or because the economy is in peril?
Many analysts maintain it’s the former. Price inflation hit 2.5% in August.
Officials have said they’re increasingly confident inflation is headed back to normal, so their attention is turning to the risks to the job market.
One factor officials have insisted does not inform into their decision is the election.
Republicans and Democrats have been watching this Fed’s moves closely for two years, and a cut will likely help Democrats as the party in power.
But Fed chair Jerome Powell has said time and again that the bank is focused on economic data, not politics, in making its move.
How big will this rate cut be?
Fed chair Jerome Powell has tried to avoid surprises with rate cut decisions
Analysts are divided about whether the Fed will announce a cut of 0.25 percentage points or go for a bigger, and more unusual, 0.5 percentage points cut.
For a bank that has tried hard to telegraph its moves well in advance, the level of uncertainty is unusually high.
An isolated rate cut, even a bigger one, might not make that much of a difference to regular borrowers.
But this meeting is expected to mark the start of a series of actions that will bring borrowing costs lower over the next year or so.
Just how low remains a matter of debate.
Mr Powell will presumably be asked about it at the press conference after the bank’s announcement, and he will presumably say it will depend on the data – his go-to response.
But the Fed will release a chart showing what its members predict, which could help shape that picture.