Traders see the odds of a Fed rate cut by September at 100%

The probabilities are based on trading in CME Fed Funds futures contracts.

Traders see the odds of a Fed rate cut by September at 100%

Federal Reserve Bank Chair Jerome Powell speaks during a House Financial Services Committee hearing on the Federal Reserve's Semi-Annual Monetary Policy Report at the U.S. Capitol on July 10, 2024 in Washington, DC. 

Bonnie Cash | Getty Images

Traders are now 100% certain the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates by September.

There are now 93.3% odds that the Fed's target range for the federal funds rate, its key rate, will be lowered by a quarter percentage point to 5% to 5.25% in September from the current 5.25% to 5.5%, according to the CME FedWatch tool. And there are 6.7% odds that the rate will be a half percentage point lower in September, accounting for some traders believing the Fed will cut at its meeting at the end of July and again in September, says the tool. Taken together, you get the 100% odds.

The catalyst for the change in odds was the consumer price index update for June last week, which showed a 0.1% decrease from the prior month. That put the annual inflation rate at 3%, the lowest in three years. Odds that rates would be cut in September were about 70% a month ago.

The CME FedWatch Tool computes the probabilities based on trading in fed funds futures contracts at the exchange, where traders are placing their bets on the level of the effective fed funds rate in 30-day increments. Simply put, this is a reflection of where traders are putting their money. Actual real life probability of rates remaining where they are today in September are not zero percent, but what this means is that no traders out there are willing to put actual money on the line to bet on that.

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's recent hints have also cemented traders' belief that the central bank will act by September. On Monday, Powell said the Fed wouldn't wait for inflation to get all the way to its 2% target rate before it began cutting, because of the lag effects of tightening.

The Fed is looking for "greater confidence" that inflation will return to 2% level, he said.

"What increases that confidence in that is more good inflation data, and lately here we have been getting some of that," added Powell.

The Fed next decides on interest rates on July 31 and again on Sept 18. It doesn't meet on rates in August.