How to make the Fed rate cut work for you

The Federal Reserve delivered a half percentage point interest rate cut on Wednesday ā€“ its first cut since March 2020.

Wednesdayā€™s move is expected to be the first of several rate cuts over the next year or two. But it alone may not immediately have a big impact on your finances.

For borrowers, ā€œrates are not going to fall fast enough to bail you out of a bad situation,ā€ said Greg McBride, chief financial analyst at Bankrate.com. ā€œAnd for savers, these rate cuts wonā€™t erase the benefit you got from rising rates in 2022 and 2023. Savers with competitive high-yielding accounts will still be way ahead of the game.ā€

Hereā€™s how the Fedā€™s rate-cut move will affect your life, including your credit cards, car loans, home loans, high-yield savings accounts, certificates of deposits and other financial accounts.

Your credit cards

It may take two or three statement cycles before you start to see a lower rate on your credit cards, McBride said.

But given that the average credit card rate is just under 21% ā€” and the average rate on retail store cards is north of 30% ā€” a half point drop may not help much. Even if a sustained rate-cutting campaign over the next two years pushes the average credit card rate to 16.3% ā€” where it was at the start of 2022, before the Fed started hiking rates to beat back inflation ā€” it will still be a pricey loan.

What to do: If you have credit card debt, the advice is the same as it ever was: Pay it off.

Try to get a zero-rate balance transfer card that can buy you at least 12 to 18 months interest free so you can meaningfully pay down the principal you owe. If you canā€™t secure that, see if you can transfer your balance to a credit card from a credit union or local bank that offers lower rates than the biggest banks. ā€œThey typically have fewer perks, but their rates can be half as high,ā€ said Chris Diodato, a fee-only certified financial planner and founder of WELLth Financial Planning.

Your car

Car loan rates are likely to move down fairly quickly in response to the Fed, said Jessica Caldwell, head of insights at Edmunds.com, an online guide to car shopping. In its August survey of car shoppers, a majority (64%) said a Fed rate cut likely would affect the timing of their purchase.

But hereā€™s the thing: Car loan rates are pretty high ā€” the average is 7.1% for new cars and 11.3% for used cars, according to Edmunds. So a half-point drop may not save you as much as you think.

What to do: Every quarter-point cut in your rate knocks $4 a month off a typical loan on a $35,000 car, according to Bankrate. So a full percentage point drop amounts to just $16 a month, or less than $200 a year. ā€œYour real lever for savings is the price of the car you choose, how much youā€™re financing and your credit rating,ā€ McBride said.