The US Federal Reserve's January policy minutes of the meeting are announced. And the rates decision outlook seems rather grimmer because the US Fed officials are split in opinions. While the possibility of rate cuts is still on the cards, the chances of pausing rates for as long as needed are not chalked down. But what the market is not expecting is that the Fed has actually also signaled a rate hike scenario in the later policies of 2026.
FOMC Minutes Highlights:

Under the Fed minutes report, the officials noted that inflation had remained somewhat elevated. And available indicators currently suggest that economic activity has been expanding at a solid pace.
FOMC members observed that job gains had remained low and that the unemployment rate had shown some signs of stabilization. Against this backdrop, FOMC supported maintaining the current target range for the federal funds rate at this meeting.
Accordingly, the Fed had voted unanimously to keep key federal fund rates unchanged between 3.5%-3.75% in January 2026. Those Fed officials who voted to keep rates unchanged viewed that, after the 75 basis point lowering of the target range last year, the current stance of monetary policy was within the range of estimates of the neutral level.
But there were participants who voted for lowering rates. As per the minutes, these officials have expressed concerns that the current stance of the policy rate was still meaningfully restrictive and viewed downside risks to the labor market as a more prominent policy concern than the risk of persistently elevated inflation.
That being said, the minutes added, "In considering the outlook for monetary policy, several participants commented that further downward adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate would likely be appropriate if inflation were to decline in line with their expectations."
But, it also said, "Some participants commented that it would likely be appropriate to hold the policy rate steady for some time as the committee carefully assesses incoming data, and a number of these participants judged that additional policy easing may not be warranted until there was clear indication that the progress of disinflation was firmly back on track."
But the bombshell was the possibility of rate hike in 2026. FOMC minutes added, "Several participants indicated that they would have supported a two-sided description of the Committee's future interest rate decisions, reflecting the possibility that upward adjustments to the target range for the federal funds rate could be appropriate if inflation remains at above-target levels."
What Could A Split Fed Opinion Mean Ahead?
According to Glenn Handley, a financial consulter at SecFin Solutions, said the minutes are explicit: "a number of officials" wanted language preserving the option to hike. Not as a base case-but as a live possibility if price pressures re-accelerate.
Meanwhile, the "cuts ahead" narrative that dominated Q4 is quietly being walked back. Adding Handley said, "The Fed's reaction function is now symmetric. Easing if inflation falls. Tightening if it doesn't."
"Markets priced for one direction. The Fed just reminded them there are two," said Handley.
And if the Fed actually hikes? Handley said, "The $40 billion monthly Treasury purchases propping up reserves become even more critical. The plumbing gets tighter, not looser."
Over the past years, the internal division between Fed members was last seen in 2018. Handley highlighted that "35 years watching Fed communications. When the committee starts inserting "two-sided" language, they're preparing the market for optionality they might actually use." He also said, "The last time internal division looked like this-some wanting cuts, others flagging hikes-was late 2018. We know how that ended."
In December 2018, Fed raised rates to its highest level in a decade that time. Tightening of monetary policy led to some significant crashes in Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite. It had reportedly marked as the worst December since 1931.
Where Is US Inflation?
Currently, US inflation rate has cooled off to 2.4% in January 2026, which is its lowest level since May, while its annual core inflation slipped to its lowest print since March 2021 to 2.5%.
However, US economy added 130,000 payrolls in January 2026, multi-fold up from the downwardly revised 48,000 rise in December and well above forecasts of 70,000. This has become the highest figure since December 2024.
"The latest US jobs data indicating addition of 1,30,000 jobs last month and unemployment falling to 4.3% points to the possibility of no rate cuts by the Fed in the near-term," said Dr. VK Vijayakumar, Chief Investment Strategist, Geojit Investments Limited earlier.
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