Former St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard said the Federal Reserve is likely to resume tightening later this year, with September emerging as the next realistic window for a rate increase.
Core inflation running well above 3% has crossed what former St. Louis Fed President Jim Bullard calls a "red line" for the Federal Reserve, making a rate hike in September increasingly likely despite a probable pause in July.
"Core inflation is too high. It's up 6/10 from where it was over 3%. Well over 3% now. The Committee doesn't like that. The 3% is a red line," Bullard, now Dean of the Mitch Daniels School of Business at Purdue University, said on CNBC's Squawk Box on July 6.
Bullard acknowledged two disinflationary forces — falling oil prices and bond market signals that peak inflation has passed — but said those factors are unlikely to substitute for policy action. He characterized the June Federal Open Market Committee meeting as "pretty hawkish," suggesting the groundwork for a move has already been laid. On timing, he said July is "a little soon" but the Committee could "tee up September." He also pushed back against the consensus view of a single rate increase, noting the Fed historically does not deliver one-off hikes when tightening is warranted.
The implication for markets is significant. If the Fed resumes tightening after a July pause, bond yields would likely rise, the dollar would strengthen, and risk assets from equities to cryptocurrencies would face renewed headwinds. The September FOMC meeting, scheduled for Sept. 15-16, will be the next inflection point — and whether it delivers a hike depends entirely on whether upcoming inflation reports show enough improvement to convince policymakers that price pressures are moving back toward the 2% target.
Why AI Productivity Gains Won't Save the Fed
Chairman Warsh has publicly leaned on the idea that artificial intelligence could boost productivity and ease inflationary pressure without aggressive rate hikes. Bullard dismissed that timeline as unrealistic for the near term. "Productivity is hard to measure. It's great technology. It will diffuse through the whole economy. But that'll take time. You got to get it through all these business cultures that have grown up over a long period of time," he said. If AI-driven productivity gains take years rather than quarters to show up in the data, the Fed cannot rely on them to close the gap between 3%-plus core inflation and its 2% target.
What the Market Is Pricing Now
The Fed has held its policy rate steady following a series of cuts through late 2025 and early 2026. The June FOMC statement was characterized as "pretty hawkish" by Bullard, signaling the Committee is preparing markets for a potential reversal. The last time the Fed used similarly hawkish language was in late 2023, when it held rates at 5.25%-5.50% for months before eventually cutting in September 2024. That historical precedent suggests the Committee is willing to hold a restrictive stance for an extended period if inflation data does not cooperate.
For investors, the key question is whether the July inflation reports — starting with the June CPI release on July 14 — show enough disinflation to keep the Fed on hold. If core CPI prints above 3% again, the September hike becomes nearly certain, and the path of least resistance for rates will be higher for longer.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.