Interest Rates Hold Steady Following Latest FOMC Meeting

The Federal Reserve elected to not raise the federal funds rate for a second consecutive meeting, and the third time in 2023.

  • The Federal Reserve (Fed) elected to not raise the federal funds rate at the October/November 2023 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting.
  • It is the second consecutive meeting at which the central bank has chosen to hold interest rates steady.
  • The federal funds rate target range remains 5.25%-5.50% and the Fed's cumulative total increase sits at 525 basis points (bps) since March 2022, with a total increase of 100 bps occurring in 2023.
  • With a resilient U.S. economy, strong labor market and robust third-quarter GDP results, the Fed still has work to do to bring inflation down to its stated 2% target.
  • The Fed indicated it would continue to reduce its holdings of Treasury securities, agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities according to previously announced plans.
  • The Fed doesn’t think that its policy is what has been causing higher yields and is not convinced that financial conditions are as tight as what those yields indicate.