U.S. 'Approaching' Conditions for Interest Rate Hike: Fed Minutes

This version of Fed Minutes N412546 - Business and Economy | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

Conditions for a rate increase are "approaching" though not at hand, according to the minutes from the most recent Federal Reserve meeting released We
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The Federal Reserve emblem.MANDEL NGAN / AFP - Getty Images

Conditions for a rate increase are "approaching" though not at hand, according to the minutes from the most recent Federal Reserve meeting released Wednesday.

Policymakers at the U.S. central bank's Open Market Committee said at the July session that conditions hadn't been achieved yet for the first interest rate increase in nearly 10 years, due primarily to inflation that is not yet moving toward the necessary conditions.

"Most judged that the conditions for policy firming had not yet been achieved, but they noted that conditions were approaching that point. Participants observed that the labor market had improved notably since early this year, but many saw scope for some further improvement," the minutes said.

Discussion included both wariness over the pace of inflation as well as a "small" downward revision in medium-term gross domestic product growth.

Read the full minutes here.

The minutes appeared to be released on Bloomberg terminals earlier than their usual 2 p.m. ET time for reasons not immediately clear, and did not hit the Fed's website until about 1:45. In a statement to CNBC, Bloomberg said, "In the process of preparing embargoed material we inadvertently sent a headline ahead of the embargo."

Fed may have just gotten a red light for rate hike

After being sharply lower earlier, stocks rallied quickly after the premature release while bond yields hit session lows.

"It's a little bit of a puzzling reaction. Certainly they didn't take (a rate hike) off the table," said Richard Clarida, global strategic advisor at Pimco. "You'd have to infer maybe the markets were looking for something in neon, ' Yes we are going to hike.'"

The Fed has set a 2 percent inflation rate as one of the benchmarks for a rate increase, which has not been breached, along with a 6 percent unemployment rate that, conversely, has long since been eclipsed.

Carrying a Balance on Credit Cards? Fed Interest Rate Hike Will Cost You

"You can make the case that core inflation is running at an uphill level. But headline inflation is depressed and the rest of the world is not doing very well in terms of growth and is awash in excess capacity," said Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist at Prudential Fixed Income. "In this global setting...you'd almost think the Fed would be more worried about fostering growth and inflation."

The FOMC declined to raise rates at the July meeting. CME traders had been assigning a 46 percent probability of a rate hike in September. RBS said futures pricing after the minutes release cut that probability to 36 percent, with the higher likelihood now coming in January.

"Many participants indicated that their outlook for sustained economic growth and further improvement in labor markets was key in supporting their expectation that inflation would move up to the Committee's 2 percent objective, and that they would be looking for evidence that the economic outlook was evolving as they anticipated," the minutes said.

Chair Yellen, please take your victory lap!

"However, some participants expressed the view that the incoming information had not yet provided grounds for reasonable confidence that inflation would move back to 2 percent over the medium term and that the inflation outlook thus might not soon meet one of the conditions established by the Committee for initiating a firming of policy."

The Fed last raised rates more than nine years ago and has kept the key funds rate near zero since a series of moves to stem the financial crisis in late 2008. In addition to zero rates, the Fed expanded its balance sheet by more than $3.5 trillion, to $4.5 trillion, in three rounds of bond purchases called quantitative easing.

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