Current:Home > StocksFederal Reserve minutes: Too-high inflation, still a threat, could require more rate hikes -AssetTrainer
Federal Reserve minutes: Too-high inflation, still a threat, could require more rate hikes
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:54:59
WASHINGTON (AP) — Most Federal Reserve officials last month still regarded high inflation as an ongoing threat that could require further interest rate increases, according to the minutes of their July 25-26 meeting released Wednesday.
At the same time, the officials saw “a number of tentative signs that inflation pressures could be abating.” It was a mixed view that echoed Chair Jerome Powell’s noncommittal stance about future rate hikes at a news conference after the meeting.
According to the minutes, the Fed’s policymakers also felt that despite signs of progress on inflation, it remained well above their 2% target. They “would need to see more data ... to be confident that inflation pressures were abating” and on track to return to their target.
At the meeting, the Fed decided to raise its benchmark rate for the 11th time in 17 months in its ongoing drive to curb inflation. But in a statement after the meeting, it provided little guidance about when — or whether — it might raise rates again.
Most investors and economists have said they believe July’s rate hike will be the last. Earlier this week, economists at Goldman Sachs projected that the Fed will actually start to cut rates by the middle of next year.
Since last month’s Fed meeting, more data has pointed in the direction of a “soft landing,” in which the economy would slow enough to reduce inflation toward the central bank’s 2% target without falling into a deep recession. The Fed has raised its key rate to a 22-year high of about 5.4%.
Inflation has cooled further, according to the latest readings of “core” prices, a closely watched category that excludes volatile food and energy costs. Core prices rose 4.7% in July a year earlier, the smallest such increase since October 2021. Fed officials track core prices, which they believe provide a better read on underlying inflation.
Overall consumer prices rose 3.2% in July compared with a year earlier, above the previous month’s pace because of higher gas and food costs. Still, that is far below the peak inflation rate of 9.1% in June 2022.
Yet that progress has been made without the sharp increase in unemployment that many economists had expected would follow the Fed’s sharp series of interest rate hikes, the fastest in four decades.
veryGood! (73)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Does Dad of 4 Boys Michael Phelps Want to Try for a Baby Girl? He Says…
- Selena Gomez's Latest PDA Pic With Boyfriend Benny Blanco Will Make You Blush
- Biden cancels speech at teachers union convention in Philadelphia after union staff goes on strike
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- From 'Ghostbusters' to 'Gremlins,' was 1984 the most epic summer for movies ever?
- Football fireworks: Five NFL teams that could be more explosive in 2024
- Shark attack on South Padre Island, Texas leaves 2 injured, 2 others report encounters
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Selena Gomez's Latest PDA Pic With Boyfriend Benny Blanco Will Make You Blush
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Accessorize With Early Amazon Prime Day Jewelry Deals: 42 Earrings for $13.99, $5.39 Necklaces & More
- Feeling strange about celebrating July 4th amid Biden-Trump chaos? You’re not alone.
- Feeling strange about celebrating July 4th amid Biden-Trump chaos? You’re not alone.
- Trump wants to turn the clock on daylight saving time
- Hailey Welch, aka the 'Hawk Tuah girl,' learns firsthand what it means to go viral
- Joey Chestnut nearly eclipses Nathan's contest winner during exhibition at Army base in Texas
- Sierra Leone outlaws child marriage. Even witnesses to such weddings can face jail time.
Recommendation
SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
An electric car-centric world ponders the future of the gas station
Arizona man pleads guilty to murder in wife’s death less than a week after reporting her missing
Ronaldo comforts disconsolate Pepe as Portugal’s veterans make cruel exit at Euro 2024
Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
Hurricane Beryl leaves Armageddon-like destruction in Grenada, field of devastation on Union Island, Caribbean leaders say
After hitting Yucatan Peninsula, Beryl churns in Gulf of Mexico as Texas braces for potential hit
One dies after explosion at Arkansas defense weapons plant