Key Takeaways
- Markets shifted after the Fed’s latest cut, and the divided 2026 outlook shows how uncertain the path for interest rates has become.
- A split Fed outlook means savings and CD yields could move unpredictably next year as banks adjust to both the recent cut and a murkier rate path.
- It’s easy to track rate-cut odds yourself with the CME FedWatch tool, which updates in real time as traders react to new data.
What’s Changed in the Fed’s Rate Outlook After Its Latest Cut
When you want to know where bank savings rates are headed, it all comes down to what the Federal Reserve does next. That’s because the Fed’s benchmark rate directly influences how much banks and credit unions pay on savings, money market, and certificate of deposit (CD) accounts.
After the Fed delivered its latest rate cut this week, markets quickly shifted to assessing what’s to come in 2026. The newest set of Fed projections shows policymakers sharply divided on where rates could go next year, with expectations ranging from a small hike to cuts totaling as much as 1.50 percentage points. It’s an unusually wide spread that signals just how uncertain the next stage of policy may be.
The volatility of Fed predictions stems from several crosscurrents. The recent government shutdown delayed key economic data releases, giving officials less visibility into inflation and growth. Meanwhile, unemployment has drifted higher at the same time that inflation has reaccelerated, leaving central bankers to weigh which risk poses the greater threat. The Fed’s new dot plot reflects that tension, with projections scattered across a broad range.
Why This Matters to You
Savings and CD yields may continue easing after the latest cut, but the Fed’s split 2026 outlook means the path ahead is unusually uncertain. Watching how expectations shift can help you anticipate where returns may head next.
How That Could Affect What You’ll Earn on Your Cash
Because the Fed’s benchmark rate directly shapes what banks and credit unions pay on deposits, the most recent rate cut is putting gentle downward pressure on savings, money market, and CD yields. That means cash you keep in a savings or money market account will likely earn a bit less if your bank trims its APY in line with the Fed’s move. CD rates on new accounts are also expected to slip. (CDs you already hold are fixed-rate products, so their yields won’t change.)
Even with some slippage from the 2023–24 highs, returns remain historically strong. Today’s best high-yield savings accounts offer mid-4% APYs, and a few still reach 5%. The top nationwide CDs remain attractive too, with guaranteed 4.00%–4.50% yields available across terms from 3 months to 5 years.
While there’s nothing you can do to shield a savings or money market account from falling yields, you can lock in one of today’s higher rates with a CD before banks trim them further. But with the Fed’s 2026 outlook now sharply divided, the uncertainty could lead banks and credit unions to hold CD yields roughly steady until a clearer path for policy emerges.
Tip
Anytime you’re shopping for a CD, timing matters. Tracking where markets expect rates to head can help you decide whether to lock in a CD now and which term length makes the most sense.
How To Track Rate-Cut Odds Like the Pros
What the Fed decides is never certain until its official announcement at the end of each meeting. Every six weeks or so, central bankers meet for two days to review the latest economic data and debate whether to move their benchmark rate. Since no one knows what new data will emerge before each meeting, any forecast is only an educated guess.
But financial markets make those guesses in real time, and you can see them for yourself. The CME FedWatch Tool shows the probabilities traders assign to different rate outcomes at upcoming Fed meetings. You don’t have to be a Wall Street insider to use it.
Click on the tool, and you’ll see tabs for each scheduled Fed meeting. For example, selecting the Jan. 26 meeting will display the market’s current odds for various rate scenarios at the next meeting. At the top, the chart indicates today’s target range (“350–375” right now, which means a federal funds rate of 3.50%–3.75%) and compares it to potential new ranges. The bar showing 350–375 represents the probability of no change, which currently sits at roughly 76%, while the bar for 325–350 shows the odds of a quarter-point reduction at that meeting.
For a longer view, you can choose the tab for the final 2026 meeting. Markets now assign more than a 70% chance that policymakers will deliver at least two quarter-point cuts by then, though the Fed’s latest dot plot shows officials are far from aligned on that path.
Keep in mind that these bars move constantly, sometimes inching higher or lower with daily headlines, and other times swinging sharply after fresh data or Fed commentary. Checking the chart regularly is the easiest way to understand how expectations are evolving—and to anticipate how savings and CD rates might move next.
