Featured Image

What the Fed Interest Rate Cut May Mean for Manufacturers

In a highly anticipated move, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell announced the target rate would be cut 50 basis points, bringing the federal funds rate to a 4.75% to 5% target range.
Sep 18, 2024

McLean, Va. (September 18, 2024) — In a highly anticipated move, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell announced the target rate would be cut 50 basis points, bringing the federal funds rate to a 4.75% to 5% target range. This move comes less than a week after the close of IMTS 2024, the largest manufacturing trade show in the Western Hemisphere, where the technology needed to meet consumer and business demands of tomorrow were on display and met with overwhelming enthusiasm by manufacturers.

“Economic convention says this decrease will help spur additional consumer purchasing and business investment. Fulfilling this additional demand will require the parts and products that are made with the metalworking machinery AMT members provide,” said Christopher Chidzik, principal economist of AMT – The Association For Manufacturing Technology.

“A gradual normalization of interest rates would have been a welcome signal the Fed has squeezed inflationary pressures from the economy without tipping it into recession. With this larger cut, Chair Powell has also recognized some growing risks of rising unemployment. While that may cause some to entrench their hesitation into future planning, the forward guidance shows unemployment deviating little from the longer-term trend. If consumers and businesses take those signals from the Fed and translate them into additional spending and investment in the remainder of 2024, demand for manufacturing technology will surely begin to increase for the rest of the year and remain elevated through 2025.”

PicturePicture
Author
Kristin Bartschi
Director, Marketing & Communications
Recent intelligence News
Any move by the Federal Reserve that keeps the economy growing at or above its current pace would spur additional investment in manufacturing technology given the currently elevated capacity utilization levels.
This article will explore how demand for automation responded to historic shifts, the impact on manufacturing jobs, and what impacts these shifting trends have had on productivity.
In much the same way that the Fed was able to reduce interest rates in 1995 to allow the economy to continue expanding for the remainder of the decade, today’s Fed may be engineering a so-called “soft landing,".
In a widely anticipated move, the Federal Reserve slashed the federal funds rate by another 25 basis points to a target range of 4.5% to 4.75%. The manufacturing technology industry may find itself at the beginning of a strong market.
Today the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis released their first estimate of GDP for the third quarter of 2024. According to the first estimate, GDP grew 2.8% at an annualized rate.
Similar News
undefined
Intelligence
By Kristin Bartschi | Dec 18, 2024

Any move by the Federal Reserve that keeps the economy growing at or above its current pace would spur additional investment in manufacturing technology given the currently elevated capacity utilization levels.

2 min
undefined
Intelligence
By Christopher Chidzik | Dec 11, 2024

Shipments of cutting tools, measured by the Cutting Tool Market Report compiled by AMT and USCTI, totaled $212.5 million in October 2024, a 12.6% increase from September 2024 but down 0.2% from October 2023. Year-to-date shipments totaled $2.07 billion.

4 min
undefined
Intelligence
By Christopher Chidzik | Dec 09, 2024

Orders of manufacturing technology, measured by the USMTO report published by AMT, totaled $385 million in October 2024, a 14.5% decrease from September. Year-to-date orders reached $3.74 billion, a decline of 7.5% compared to the first 10 months of 2023.

5 min