Federal Reserve officials were divided on the direction of interest rates at their June 16-17 meeting, the minutes showed Wednesday, as a weaker-than-expected jobs report has since pushed September hike odds to 53%.
Federal Reserve officials were divided on the direction of interest rates at their June 16-17 meeting, the minutes showed Wednesday, as a weaker-than-expected jobs report has since pushed September hike odds to 53%.

Federal Reserve officials were split on the direction of interest rates at their June 16-17 meeting, the minutes showed Wednesday, with some arguing for further tightening while others saw sufficient progress on inflation to justify a pause. The first policy meeting led by Chairman Kevin Warsh produced no rate change, but the internal debate laid bare the uncertainty surrounding the path ahead.
"The minutes reveal a committee wrestling with conflicting signals — sticky services inflation on one side and a softening labor market on the other," said Priya Malhotra, senior U.S. economist at Oxford Economics. "The division was not about the June hold but about what comes next."
The fed funds rate remains at 5.25% to 5.50%, unchanged since the 25-basis-point hike in July 2025. The dot plot released with the June statement pointed to at least one additional quarter-point increase in 2026, though the minutes showed that view was not unanimous. Several participants noted that the cumulative tightening since 2023 was still working through the economy and that patience was warranted.
Since the meeting, the data has shifted in favor of the dovish camp. The June payrolls report showed the economy added just 57,000 jobs, well below the 110,000 to 115,000 consensus estimate. CME FedWatch data shows September hike probabilities fell from about 65% before the payrolls release to roughly 53% after, the largest single-session repricing in four months.
Bond and Gold Markets Reprice
The jobs miss triggered a sharp reversal in rate-sensitive assets. The 10-year Treasury yield fell nearly 2 basis points to 4.459% on Monday, while the 2-year yield declined to 4.112%. The 30-year bond yield slipped to 4.969%. Gold, which had been grinding lower for weeks, reversed hard after the payrolls data, closing the week at $4,175.70 — up $87.31 or 2.14%. The weekly high reached $4,195.51.
The last time the labor market surprised this far below consensus was in August 2024, when payrolls printed at 89,000 against a 160,000 forecast. The 10-year yield fell 15 basis points in the two weeks that followed, and the Fed delivered a 25-basis-point cut at its September meeting that year.
What the Minutes Mean for the Rate Path
The key question heading into the July 28-29 FOMC meeting is whether the June division has widened or narrowed. If the committee was already questioning the pace of tightening before the payrolls miss, the case for a September hold — or even a cut — has strengthened considerably. Overnight index swaps currently price about 40 basis points of easing by year-end, implying roughly a 60% probability of a single cut.
The IMF's latest World Economic Outlook, released this week, kept its 2026 global growth forecast largely unchanged, crediting AI-driven productivity gains for offsetting headwinds from Middle East conflicts. That steady-growth backdrop gives the Fed room to wait, but it does not resolve the internal split over whether waiting is the right call.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.