Markets Wait on Fed Minutes: What to Expect from Today’s Release

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The Federal Reserve releases the minutes from its June 16-17 policy meeting on Wednesday at 2 p.m. ET. Investors hoping for clarity on a September rate hike may come away with less than they expect.

Chair Kevin Warsh withheld his own rate projection this cycle. He also issued a policy statement of just 130 words that dropped forward guidance entirely. That leaves the minutes as the only detailed record of the committee’s internal debate.

A Committee Split Between Hawks and Doves

The FOMC held rates steady at 3.50% to 3.75% on June 17. That marked the fourth consecutive hold. Nine of 18 FOMC policymakers penciled in at least one 2026 hike. Warsh declined to submit a projection of his own.

The committee met before the Bureau of Labor Statistics released its June payrolls report. That report showed just 57,000 new jobs, the weakest reading in four months. Any hawkish language in the minutes reflects a labor market that still looked solid at the time. The softer picture came days later.

Fed minutes drop Wednesday.

They were written BEFORE the payrolls miss.

So the market gets a hawkish document from a Fed that half-projected a HIKE… landing on a market that just repriced dovish off 57K jobs.

The committee was debating policy on June 16-17 with no knowledge…

— Jamaal Trades (@jamaal_trades) July 7, 2026

The CME FedWatch Tool now prices roughly a 50% to 55% chance of a September hike. That is down from 66% before a weaker-than-expected June jobs report. Warsh addressed the uncertainty directly at his press conference.

“We recognize that inflation has been running well ahead of the Fed’s long-stated inflation
goal of 2 percent that’s been going on for more than five years. Persistently high prices are a
burden for the American people. But the recent past need not be prologue.”
Kevin Warsh.

Why the Silence Itself Is the Story

Warsh has pushed for a leaner communication style since taking office. He argues forward guidance entangles the Fed in markets that should react to data instead.

That approach puts unusual weight on Wednesday’s release. No accompanying statement language exists for comparison. Speaking at the Sintra policy forum in July, Warsh left little doubt about his inflation stance. he stated that people should not expect his Fed to be comfortable with inflation above 2%

The minutes could reveal how close the committee’s hawks came to pushing for a hike in June. Or they could leave the disagreement as vague as the statement did.

Either way, a chair who prefers silence may keep investors waiting past Wednesday for real clarity.

The post Markets Wait on Fed Minutes: What to Expect from Today’s Release appeared first on BeInCrypto.

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