WASHINGTON — The likelihood of a Federal Reserve rate cut in September is now seen near 100% after new data showed U.S. inflation increased at a moderate pace in July and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said he thought an aggressive half-point cut was possible given recent weak employment numbers.

Traders in contracts tied to the benchmark federal funds rate on Wednesday put the odds of a quarter-percentage point cut at the Fed’s September 16-17 meeting at 99.9%, according to estimates calculated by the CME Group’s FedWatch tool that followed the release of July Consumer Price Index data on Tuesday and later comments by Bessent noting that the Fed had used fears of a weakening job market as justification for a larger cut last September.

Trump has slammed last year’s cut as politically m

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