Remember, the Fed doesn’t, in actuality, “set rates”, it follows and reacts to the market.
“Davidson” submits:
The history of Fed Funds adjustments vs the Discounted T-Bill Rate makes it clear that once the Discounted T-Bill rate has moved enough in any direction to provide the Fed room, it adjusts accordingly. Historically the Fed has required a premium of 0.1-0.2% but in recent years has been willing to move without a premium to the Discounted T-Bill Rate. Currently the Discounted T-Bill Rate is shifting lower and as of Aug 15 is 4.12%. The Fed could cut 0.25% this time as soon as the Discounted T-Bill Rate moves to 4.08%.
