The latest Federal Reserve meeting minutes have been released, revealing a surprising development: for the first time, the minutes explicitly mention that if inflation remains persistently above the 2% target, the Fed may consider raising interest rates. This signals a notable shift in market expectations that the Fed will maintain a “wait-and-see” stance in the near term and underscores that combating inflation remains the central priority.
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting held on January 27-28 decided to keep the federal funds rate target range unchanged at 3.50%–3.75%. This decision was supported by “almost all” participants, with only two officials (Governor Christopher Waller and Stephen Miran) voting against, advocating for a 25 basis point cut due to concerns about potential weakening in the labor market.
Regarding inflation outlooks, most participants warned that progress toward the 2% goal could be slower and more uneven than expected, with the risk of inflation remaining above target being “significant.” The minutes specifically note that current inflation levels are still about 1 percentage point above the target. While tariff effects are expected to diminish gradually by mid-year, rising costs and resilient demand could make disinflation more challenging.
The most notable change is that “several participants” expressed support for language in the post-meeting statement that explicitly reflects that, if inflation remains above the target, raising rates (i.e., tightening) could be appropriate. This is the first time recent official documents have explicitly mentioned the possibility of rate hikes, marking a return of hawkish sentiment. In contrast, Fed Chair Powell has previously stated multiple times that rate increases are not under consideration, making this shift in the minutes particularly noteworthy.
Additionally, the committee discussed the dual effects of artificial intelligence (AI): on one hand, AI-driven productivity gains could exert downward pressure on inflation; on the other hand, elevated asset valuations, market concentration, and opaque private financing pose potential financial stability risks.
Nick Timiraos, a reporter often regarded as the “voice of the Fed” for The Wall Street Journal, pointed out after the minutes’ release that sometimes what the Fed “doesn’t say” is the most telling.
He observed that: from the beginning of last year through December, staff forecasts consistently predicted inflation would return to 2% by 2027; in December, this forecast was pushed back to 2028. However, the January minutes contain no specific year for inflation to reach 2%.
Instead, the language is more vague: compared to the December forecast, inflation outlooks are described as “slightly higher overall,” and once tariff effects subside, inflation is expected to revert to the “previous disinflation trend.” Timiraos emphasized that the critical phrase “and reach 2% by 2028” from the December minutes has completely disappeared in the January version. This subtle change is seen as a sign that the Fed staff’s confidence in inflation returning to 2% in the near term has weakened, further supporting a stance of not rushing to cut rates soon.
One more note on the Fed minutes: Sometimes it’s interesting what they don’t say.
Last year at every meeting until December, the staff forecast called for inflation to return to 2% by 2027. In December, the forecast pushed this back to 2028.
But in the minutes for the January… https://t.co/PAlnUkQRpf pic.twitter.com/5nXU879WqI
— Nick Timiraos (@NickTimiraos) February 19, 2026
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