The
minutes, which are due to be published at 2 p.m. EDT (1800 GMT),
could help clarify what would prompt Fed officials to deliver a
third straight 75-basis-point rate increase at their Sept. 20-21
meeting, and what might lead them to limit upcoming increases to
half-percentage-point increments.
Data since the Fed's last policy meeting showed annual consumer
inflation eased in July to 8.5% from 9.1% in the prior month, a
fact that has led most investors to expect a 50-basis-point rate
increase next month.
But job and wage growth in July exceeded expectations, and a
recent stock market rally and other financial indicators showed
an economy that still may be too "hot" for the Fed's comfort.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell, speaking to reporters after the release
of the last policy statement in late July, left open the
possibility of another large rate hike or a somewhat smaller
one, and analysts will be looking to the minutes of that meeting
for hints about what might push the central bank in one
direction or the other.
"The timing of the slowdown in rate increases or the conditions
that would allow for the slowdown were not specified by Powell.
This opens the door to a more extended, and nuanced, discussion
in the minutes," analysts from Citi wrote.
The minutes of each Fed policymaking session are released three
weeks after the fact and, while they reflect the detailed debate
among policymakers and staff, can often seem dated.
But Fed officials for much of this year have been reshaping
monetary policy at an unusually fast clip to get ahead of the
worst inflation outbreak since the early 1980s, and the minutes
have reflected that increasing sense of urgency.
The readout from the July meeting is likely to do the same, and
emphasize the depth of the Fed's determination to get inflation
heading back to its 2% target. The Fed has lifted its benchmark
overnight interest rate by 225 points this year to a target
range of 2.25% to 2.50%.
For the Fed to scale back its rate hikes, inflation reports due
to be released before the next meeting would likely need to
confirm that the pace of price increases had peaked and was now
in decline - a point officials have pressed in their public
statements since the last meeting
https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FED/
lgpdwawwzvo/index.html.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Paul Simao)
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