Fed Faces Balancing Act as Jackson Hole Meeting Looms — Evening Brief – 08.18.25
The Fed heads into its annual conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming later this week with the market broadly expecting a 25 basis points cut in September, but the inflation backdrop looks less clear-cut than consensus implies. On the supportive side, headline CPI held at 2.7% in July, but the details are stickier: core CPI accelerated to 3.1% and the Atlanta Fed’s Sticky CPI, a measure focused on goods and services with infrequent price changes, rose to 3.4%, while PPI surged 0.9% month-over-month, the strongest in three years.
From an interest rate perspective, front-end yields look vulnerable to repricing higher if the Fed pushes back against dovish market expectations. With fed funds futures still fully discounting a September cut, there is asymmetric risk of a hawkish hold. The long end of the curve may remain anchored by growth concerns, but a stronger-than-expected CPI or payrolls release in August could steepen curves sharply. Duration risk management remains critical here — a tactical overweight to intermediate maturities while staying underweight the front end could help balance inflation risks with the possibility of slower growth.
This divergence between soft consumer prints and strong wholesale cost data suggests margins are being squeezed, and businesses may soon start passing higher costs onto consumers. If that shift materializes, the Fed’s inflation fight could become more complicated, leaving little room for the “insurance” rate cuts the market has already priced.
Adding to the complexity, consumer sentiment has turned, with the University of Michigan index falling in August as inflation expectations rebounded. At the same time, labor market signals are softening as hiring slowed to just 73,000 jobs in July, the weakest monthly gain in over a year, suggesting a loss of economic momentum. Still, policymakers are split. Fed Governor Michelle Bowman has emphasized risks to employment, while Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee downplayed the weak payrolls figure, attributing some of the slowdown to immigration curbs rather than fundamental labor market weakness.
With another round of CPI and payroll data due before the meeting, officials may hold off on a firm commitment until the last minute. For investors, the next few weeks will be pivotal in determining whether the Fed prioritizes inflation risks or employment fragility in setting the policy path.


