The vote was unanimous. Every member of the Federal Open Market Committee agreed to keep interest rates exactly where they are. But the minutes from that meeting tell a different story - one of sharp disagreement beneath the surface.
Some policymakers saw outcomes where inflation could ease, allowing lower rates. A different group feared that persistently high inflation might force further increases in interest rates. That split comes down to one question: where is inflation headed?
The Split Over Inflation
The debate inside the Fed's June meeting was between officials with competing scenarios for the future. On one side, participants who saw inflation cooling enough to justify cutting rates later this year. On the other side, those who believed price increases would stay stubbornly high, possibly requiring more rate hikes.
The source of the confusion was real-world events. President Donald Trump's tariffs drove up prices earlier. Then the Iran war made inflation worse. But falling energy prices in recent weeks created new uncertainty about how long that inflation would last.
The minutes captured that tension. LPL Financial's chief economist Jeffrey Roach noted that the minutes contain "some ambiguity," indicating "several competing views on policy."
The committee held the target range at 3.5% to 3.75% - the same level it has been for all of 2026. That was the easy part. Deciding what comes next is harder.
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The New Chairman's First Meeting
Kevin Warsh presided over his first Fed meeting as chairman. President Trump nominated him after criticizing predecessor Jerome Powell for not cutting rates fast enough. Warsh took over and immediately faced a divided committee.
The meeting summary was unusually short - just 14 pages, compared to the typical release though not dramatically so. The post-meeting statement was also trimmed to about one-third its normal length. That brevity may reflect the internal disagreement or a new approach to communication.
Warsh has already created five task forces to review how the Fed operates, with one focused on communications. Since June, Warsh has appeared publicly just once - at a European Central Bank gathering in Portugal. Investors are watching for clues about his policy preferences, but so far he has stayed quiet.
The dot-plot chart showed that officials expect one rate hike this year, after which they will lower rates in both of the next two years. Notably, Warsh did not participate in that projection, leaving out the chairman's view.
What's Next for Rates
The Fed said future decisions will depend on "incoming information" rather than a fixed path. That is standard language, but the internal split makes it more important.
The minutes stated that "many participants indicated that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be within or slightly below the current target range at the end of this year," while "many other participants, however, assessed that the appropriate level of the federal funds rate would be above the current target range at the end of this year."
Roach's comment about "competing views" sums it up. The committee is not leaning one way or the other. It is waiting to see what the data shows.
Worth Noting
The July 8 release of the 14-page summary came nearly three weeks after the actual meeting. That is typical for FOMC minutes, but the brevity and the sharp divisions inside are unusual. "Participants noted that their future policy actions would depend on incoming information."
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