Fed Minutes June 26
लेखक: StoneX · 13 जुलाई 2026
- Key Shifts in Federal Reserve Policy Outlook
- The focus of the Federal Reserve shifted from when monetary easing might begin to whether further tightening might be necessary (p. 1).
- There is heightened concern that inflation is becoming broader and more persistent, risking unanchored expectations (p. 1).
- Economic confidence has increased, with a strong emphasis on AI and investment, while concerns regarding the labor market have decreased (p. 1).
- Intensification of Inflation Concerns
- In April, inflation concerns focused on core inflation moving above 2% and risks from oil, tariffs, and the Middle East (p. 2).
- By June, the inflation discussion broadened to include structural persistence, services inflation, a potential wage-price spiral, and price pressures in transport, airfares, petrochemicals, and agriculture (p. 2).
- Agricultural and petrochemical price pressures are partly driven by Middle East issues, including a lack of fertilizer shipments through Hormuz (p. 2).
- Evolution of the Labor Market Assessment
- April minutes reflected concerns over low payroll growth, weaker hiring, and potential labor market fragility (p. 2).
- June minutes showed strengthened payroll employment gains and stable layoffs, with participants noting the labor market is not currently a source of inflationary pressure (p. 2).
- The Expanding Role of Artificial Intelligence (AI)
- AI evolved from a "sectoral financial-market issue" in March to a "core driver" in April, and finally to a major factor across GDP, productivity, inflation, electricity demand, and monetary policy in June (p. 2).
- In the near term, strong AI business investment is seen as contributing to persistent inflationary pressures by driving economic activity beyond potential output (p. 2).
- In the longer term, AI adoption is expected to eventually reduce production costs and increase aggregate supply, though the timing and magnitude of these productivity gains remain highly uncertain (p. 2).
- Interest Rate Targets and Expectations
- The current federal funds target is 3.75%, with an effective rate of 3.63% (p. 3).
- The dot plot, which Kevin Warsh did not contribute to, is noted as unlikely to remain in use for much longer (p. 3).