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Fed minutes show officials divided 50‑50 on year‑end rate hike, inflation at 4.2% in May and consumer expectations at 3.7%, signaling uncertainty for markets.
The Federal Reserve’s July 8 minutes disclosed a sharp split among its 19 policymakers: half favor a rate hike by year‑end while the other half prefer keeping rates unchanged or cutting, underscoring uncertainty over whether inflation will stay high or ease as the Iran conflict cools【1】.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| Policy rate target | 3.6% (current) |
| Year‑end hike split | 50% for hike, 50% for hold/cut |
| May CPI inflation | 4.2% (three‑year high) |
| 1‑yr consumer inflation expectations | 3.7% (near three‑year peak) |
The minutes, the first released under new chair Kevin Warsh, show “many” officials expecting the benchmark rate to stay at or dip slightly below 3.6% by year‑end, while an equal number anticipate it will be higher【1】. The split mirrors the June 17 forecasts, where half of the 18 policymakers who submitted projections backed a rate increase and the other half favored no change or a cut. Warsh himself did not submit a forecast, citing a desire to keep options open if the economy shifts【1】.
Policymakers largely agree that inflation should fall as gasoline prices retreat and tariff effects fade, yet a sizable contingent warns that the rapid build‑out of artificial‑intelligence infrastructure could keep price pressures elevated by raising costs for semiconductors, computer equipment, and electricity【1】. The minutes note that “many participants” see strong AI demand sustaining upward pressure on technology‑related prices, a concern echoed by recent corporate pricing moves such as Apple’s announced laptop and iPad price hikes due to pricier memory chips【1】.
Consumer inflation expectations rose to 3.7% for the next year—the highest in almost three years—while three‑year expectations climbed to 3.3%, a four‑year high, according to the New York Fed’s survey【1】. Most officials, including Warsh, say they monitor these expectations closely, though many place greater weight on financial‑market indicators, which have been more stable【1】. The minutes also reference the ongoing Iran‑Israel conflict, which has pushed inflation to a three‑year peak of 4.2% in May, but suggest that easing of the conflict could help cool price growth as gas prices fall【1】.
The deep division in the Fed’s minutes highlights the delicate balance between inflation risks from emerging AI demand and the hope that geopolitical de‑escalation will ease price pressures. How the June CPI and upcoming expectations data evolve will shape the committee’s path forward.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 3 outlets · Jul 8, 2026 · How we report
Half of the 18 policymakers who submitted forecasts support raising rates by the end of the year, while the other half support keeping rates unchanged or reducing them.
Officials noted that strong demand for AI infrastructure could sustain upward pressure on prices for technology products and electricity, potentially keeping inflation elevated.
Inflation rose to 4.2% in May, a three‑year high, and the New York Fed’s measure of one‑year consumer inflation expectations increased to 3.7%, the highest in nearly three years.