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    Home > Top Stories > Fed’s aggressive rate-hike path bolstered by new inflation, wage data
    Top Stories

    Fed’s aggressive rate-hike path bolstered by new inflation, wage data

    Published by Jessica Weisman-Pitts

    Posted on July 29, 2022

    4 min read

    Last updated: February 5, 2026

    Traders work intensely on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange, reflecting the impact of the Federal Reserve's aggressive interest rate hikes on the U.S. economy and inflation trends.
    Traders analyze market data on the New York Stock Exchange amid Fed's rate hikes - Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:monetary policyinterest rateseconomic growth

    By Ann Saphir and Howard Schneider

    (Reuters) – Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said this week he’s looking for compelling signs that inflation is cooling before the U.S. central bank will let up on what’s so far been its most aggressive set of interest rate hikes in decades.

    In data released on Friday, he largely got the opposite.

    Inflation by the Fed’s preferred measure, the personal consumption expenditures price index, jumped 6.8% in June, its steepest increase since 1982, and the rise in core prices – excluding food and energy prices and used by the Fed as an indicator of the inflation outlook – accelerated.

    Meanwhile labor costs surged 5.1% in the second quarter from a year earlier, the fastest pace in decades.

    The data prompted traders of futures tied to the Fed’s target policy to begin to price back in another 0.75-percentage-point interest rate increase at the Fed’s September policy meeting, putting the likelihood of that outcome at about a one-in-three, up from one-in-four earlier on Friday.

    “I’m convinced we’re going to have to do more in terms of interest rate increases,” Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said in an interview on National Public Radio’s “Morning Edition” program before the release of the inflation and wage data. “Exactly how much and then what trajectory will depend on how the economy evolves over the next several weeks and months. We’re going to get a lot of data … before our next meeting” on Sept. 20-21.

    That data includes more than a dozen critical readings covering inflation, employment, consumer spending and economic growth.

    The Fed this week raised the target range for its policy rate to 2.25%-2.50%, and for the first time since the current cycle of rate hikes began in March, Powell declined to specify exactly how much he expected the central bank would have to raise rates at its next meeting.

    That, along with his comments about softening consumer spending and a nod to the eventual need for reducing the pace of Fed rate hikes, prompted some analysts and equities traders to conclude the Fed would stop its policy tightening soon.

    Much of Friday’s data appeared to undermine that thesis.

    The employment cost data, which Powell said on Wednesday he would be watching, “doesn’t provide any evidence that wage growth is slowing and leaves the Fed on track to lift the funds rate another 75bps at its September meeting,” Oxford Economics analysts wrote in a note.

    But there was some welcome news on the inflation front on Friday, as the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment index showed U.S. consumers in July lowered their views of where inflation is headed. Respondents to the survey indicated they see inflation in the next year easing to a rate of 5.2% from their previous expectation of 5.3% in June. That is the lowest one-year price increase expectation since February.

    While that decline may provide some comfort that inflation expectations have not become unmoored, it is still far above the Fed’s 2% goal.

    The Fed’s fast pace of rate hikes this year has already begun to slow the economy, contributing to a negative reading on gross domestic product in the second quarter and fanning worries that the economy is already, or soon will be, in a recession.

    Powell is keeping his eye on that slowdown, but he was clear this week that with price stability of “bedrock” importance, his sharpest focus is getting inflation back on track toward the Fed’s goal.

    GRAPHIC: UMich (https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-STOCKS/myvmnlzwkpr/umich.png)

    “We need to be confident that inflation is going to get back down to mandated consistent levels,” Powell said.

    Here is a table of key data expected before the Fed’s Sept. 20-21 meeting:

    Data type Report Dates

    Employment Nonfarm Aug 5 &

    payrolls Sept 2

    JOLTS Aug 2 &

    Aug 30

    Jobless Weekly,

    claims seven

    reports

    Inflation CPI Aug 10 &

    Sept 13

    PCE Aug 26

    PPI Aug 11 &

    Sept 14

    Inflation UMich Aug 12

    expectations (P), Aug

    26 (F),

    Sept 16

    (P)

    Economic GDP Aug 25

    growth

    Consumption Retail Aug 17 &

    sales Sept 15

    Consumer Aug 26

    spending

    (Reporting by Ann Saphir; Editing by Paul Simao)

    Frequently Asked Questions about Fed’s aggressive rate-hike path bolstered by new inflation, wage data

    1What is inflation?

    Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices for goods and services rises, eroding purchasing power.

    2What is monetary policy?

    Monetary policy refers to the actions undertaken by a nation's central bank to control money supply and interest rates.

    3What are interest rates?

    Interest rates are the amount charged by lenders to borrowers for the use of money, typically expressed as a percentage.

    4What is the personal consumption expenditures price index?

    The personal consumption expenditures price index is a measure of price changes in consumer goods and services, used by the Federal Reserve to gauge inflation.

    5What is economic growth?

    Economic growth is an increase in the production of goods and services in an economy over a period of time, typically measured by GDP.

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