Market Signal: Rate cuts have paused after 175 bps of easing. Financing conditions are stable but no longer improving.
The Federal Reserve has cut 175 basis points since September 2024, and the easing cycle is now clearly in a pause phase. After two consecutive holds (January and March 2026), the Fed Funds target sits at 3.50%-3.75%, Prime remains at 6.75%, and SOFR has settled back to 3.65% after a brief quarter-end repo blip. The April 28-29 FOMC meeting is three weeks out, with markets expecting a third consecutive hold.
Rates are stable, but direction is uncertain. This is when financing decisions matter most.
Rate Snapshot, April 7, 2026
- Prime Rate: 6.75% (unchanged)
- SOFR: 3.65% (-3 bps WoW, quarter-end reversal)
- Fed Funds Target: 3.50%-3.75% (unchanged)
- Cycle position: 175 bps of cuts since Sep 2024; paused since Jan 2026
- Next FOMC: April 28-29, 2026
The Bottom Line
- The rate-cutting phase is over, for now. The Fed is evaluating, not easing.
- Borrowers are in a decision window, not a waiting game. The cost of current rates is known; the cost of waiting is not.
- If you are waiting for lower rates, the window may already be behind you.
Key Takeaways
- The Fed's pause is now two meetings deep (January and March 2026), with the April 28-29 FOMC widely expected to extend it to three, keeping the target range at 3.50%-3.75%.
- SOFR's 3 bps decline from 3.68% to 3.65% confirms the March 31 reading was a quarter-end repo-market artifact, not an early signal of tightening pressure.
- Prime Rate has held at 6.75% since the January 2026 cut, making current SBA 7(a) variable-rate maximums stable at 9.75% for loans above $350,000.
- A $500,000 SBA 7(a) loan at the current maximum rate carries a monthly payment of $6,539 over 10 years, unchanged from last week.
- Fixed-rate products (SBA 504 CDC debentures at approximately 5.50%-6.25% ) maintain a meaningful discount to variable-rate alternatives, reinforcing the value of rate strategy in capital planning.
Current Benchmark Rates
| Benchmark | Rate | WoW Change | MoM Change | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bank Prime Loan Rate | 6.75% | 0 bps | 0 bps | Fed H.15 (DPRIME) |
| SOFR | 3.65% | -3 bps | 0 bps | NY Fed (SOFR) |
| Fed Funds Upper Bound | 3.75% | 0 bps | 0 bps | FOMC (DFEDTARU) |
| Fed Funds Lower Bound | 3.50% | 0 bps | 0 bps | FOMC (DFEDTARL) |
The chart below traces the Fed Funds upper bound from its July 2023 peak through six cuts and two consecutive holds, illustrating where the current pause sits in the broader easing cycle.
What Moved
The short answer: nothing of consequence. The week's only notable data point was SOFR's reversion from 3.68% on March 31 to 3.65% by April 6, completing the round-trip that last week's edition flagged as a probable quarter-end repo-market artifact. Daily readings during the first week of April ranged from 3.62% to 3.66%, well within the band that has persisted since late March. The Prime Rate, Fed Funds target range, and longer-duration Treasury yields all printed flat week over week.
Where We Are in the Cycle
The Federal Reserve has delivered 175 basis points of cuts across six reductions since September 2024, bringing the upper bound from the cycle peak of 5.50% in July 2023 down to 3.75%. The easing phase included an initial 50 bps move in September 2024, followed by five 25 bps reductions through September 2025. Since then, the FOMC has held rates steady at consecutive meetings in January and March 2026.
Two consecutive holds establish a clear pattern: the Committee is evaluating whether the cumulative 175 bps of easing is sufficient to sustain the labor market without reigniting inflation. The April 28-29 meeting will be the third decision in this holding period, and futures pricing implies a high probability of another hold. For borrowers, this means the current rate environment is likely to persist through at least mid-May. Any resumption of cuts would require either a material deterioration in employment data or a sustained downward move in core inflation readings, neither of which is evident in current releases.
These same benchmark rates also drive residential mortgage rates, though the transmission mechanism differs. Commercial loans reprice directly off Prime and SOFR, while residential rates track the 10-year Treasury through the secondary mortgage market. The result is that business borrowers and homeowners can experience the same Fed decision very differently in practice.
Estimated Loan Rate Ranges
| Product | Estimated Rate Range | Basis |
|---|---|---|
| SBA 7(a) variable (>$350K) | Up to 9.75% | Prime + 3.00% max (SBA regulatory cap) |
| SBA 504 (CDC portion, 20-yr) | ~5.50%-6.25% fixed | Debenture rate at time of funding |
| Conventional term loan | 7.75%-9.75% | Prime + 1.0% to Prime + 3.0% |
| Equipment financing | 7.0%-12.0% | Credit quality, collateral type, term |
| Business line of credit | 7.25%-9.25% | Prime + 0.5% to Prime + 2.5% |
| CRE loan | 6.5%-8.5% | LTV, property type, occupancy |
| Bridge loan | 9.0%-14.0% | Speed premium, exit strategy risk |
Borrower Implications
Variable-Rate Borrowers
Firms carrying variable-rate debt tied to Prime or SOFR are in a stable period. The 175 bps of cumulative cuts have already reduced carrying costs meaningfully relative to mid-2024 levels, and the current pause means monthly payments are predictable for the near term. A $500,000 SBA 7(a) loan at the maximum rate for loans above $350,000 carries a monthly payment of $6,539 on a 10-year term. That figure has been unchanged since January. Borrowers who locked in during the peak rate period (mid-2023 through mid-2024) have seen their effective rates drop considerably, but those savings have now plateaued until the FOMC resumes cutting.
Fixed-Rate and Long-Duration Borrowers
For firms considering SBA 504 loans or other fixed-rate structures, the spread between fixed and variable products remains meaningful. The 504 CDC debenture rate at approximately 5.50%-6.25% for a 20-year term compares favorably to the 7(a) variable maximum of 9.75%, though the two products serve different purposes and carry different collateral requirements. Businesses weighing this decision should consider that a prolonged pause works in favor of variable-rate borrowers (no further upward pressure), while fixed-rate borrowers lock in protection against the possibility that cuts stall permanently at the current level.
Short-Term and Working Capital
Lines of credit at estimated ranges of 7.25%-9.25% remain the most directly responsive to Prime Rate movements. The stability in Prime since January means revolving credit costs are unchanged, and borrowers using credit lines for seasonal or project-based needs can budget with confidence through at least the April 28-29 FOMC decision. Equipment financing rates at 7.0%-12.0% reflect a broader spectrum of credit quality and collateral value, with the lower end available to established firms financing standard asset categories.
Across all product categories, the calculus is the same: borrowing costs have dropped meaningfully from the 2023-2024 peak, but they are no longer falling. Firms that delay decisions expecting further rate relief are making a bet against a Fed that has clearly signaled patience.
What to Watch
The April 28-29 FOMC meeting is the primary event on the rate calendar. While a hold is widely expected, the post-meeting statement and Chair Powell's press conference will be scrutinized for any shift in language around the balance of risks. Before that, the March CPI print (due April 10) and March retail sales data (due April 16) will shape the narrative heading into the meeting. A below-consensus inflation reading could revive expectations for a June cut; an upside surprise would reinforce the pause. For commercial borrowers, the practical takeaway is unchanged: fixed-versus-variable decisions hinge on whether you believe the Fed has more cuts to deliver this year or whether 3.75% represents a longer-duration resting point.