Federal Reserve officials broadly agreed at their June meeting that they would need to raise interest rates if inflation remained elevated this year, driven by the AI investment boom, Middle East energy disruption and tariffs, the minutes of the June 16-17 gathering showed Wednesday.
"Inflation's been taking off, so that changes how you might want to think about policy," Fed Governor Christopher Waller, a leading advocate for last year's rate cuts, said during a panel discussion in Rome on Monday.
Nine of 18 meeting participants penciled in at least one rate increase by December, up from zero in March, while only one anticipated lower rates, down from 12 three months ago. The fed funds rate was held at 3.5% to 3.75%, where it has stood since December. Gold traded near $4,155 an ounce after recovering from a 1.8% drop to $4,016.92 on Monday, while Brent crude rose above $72 a barrel as U.S.-Iran tensions disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.
The shift confronts the Fed with a dilemma at its July 28-29 meeting: act too quickly and risk slowing an economy that doesn't need restraint, or wait too long and let above-target inflation become entrenched. Markets price a 33% probability of a 25-basis-point rate hike at that meeting, according to CME FedWatch data.
The minutes, the first released under Chair Kevin Warsh, showed rising concern that price pressures had become more broad-based. "Several participants commented that price pressures had become more broad based, with a large share of goods and services experiencing substantial increases," the document said.
Three Inflation Shocks Converge
The AI investment boom has emerged as a new persistent force. Officials flagged the surge in spending on data centers and computing power as a source of demand the economy is straining to supply. Several noted that a year ago the Fed could treat tariff-driven price increases as one-off and let them pass through without a policy response because the labor market was soft enough to justify patience. Now, with hiring steadier and fresh cost pressures arriving from energy and AI simultaneously, that same instinct carries more risk.
The Middle East conflict added another layer. A tentative agreement to reopen shipping through the Strait of Hormuz had briefly lowered oil prices before the June meeting, but President Trump declared the ceasefire with Iran over Wednesday after Iranian attacks on commercial vessels drew fresh U.S. strikes. Trump floated seizing an Iranian oil export hub and reimposing a naval blockade.
New York Fed President John Williams said Tuesday that policy was well positioned and that he expected the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, running near 4%, to fall "each of the next several months, as energy prices come down." San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly called the return of oil near $70 a barrel "very good news" but acknowledged the balancing act: "Are they simply 'look-through' shocks because they're not meant to last forever, or do they have some fundamental way in which they bleed into the economy and change things?"
The last time the Fed faced a comparable convergence of supply-side shocks was in 2022, when the war in Ukraine and post-pandemic demand pushed inflation above 9%, ultimately forcing 525 basis points of rate hikes. The current fed funds rate of 3.5% to 3.75% remains well below that cycle's terminal rate of 5.25% to 5.5%.
Softer-than-expected June payrolls, released last week, suggested less risk of a reaccelerating labor market and could reinforce the case for patience. Officials will receive June consumer price data next week before the July 28-29 decision.
Warsh, at a conference in Portugal last week, dismissed complaints that investors need a clearer sense of how the Fed would adjust as the outlook changes. He pointed to falling interest-rate volatility, lower Treasury yields and expectations that inflation would decline over the coming year or two as evidence that his pledge to lower inflation while maintaining constructive ambiguity is succeeding. "I hear this as if people don't understand," he said. "I think they actually understand quite well."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.