The Federal Reserve is now publicly warning that artificial intelligence investment is fueling inflation, a shift that pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to a one-month high and threatens to crack the stock market's two-month trading range.
The Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75% at the June 17 Federal Open Market Committee meeting — the fourth consecutive hold — but the minutes released July 8 revealed a committee increasingly focused on a new inflation channel: the AI buildout. Officials pointed to strong demand tied to artificial intelligence infrastructure spending, layered on top of freight and warehousing costs left by the wartime energy shock and the lingering bite of tariffs, as forces keeping core prices elevated.
"The Fed is now naming AI as an inflation driver, and the bond market is listening," said James Okafor, a macro strategist who previously covered the Fed and Treasury for the Financial Times. "The concern is that AI-related capital expenditure is running the economy's supply side hot while the consumer — which makes up two-thirds of GDP — is already showing signs of strain."
The 10-year Treasury yield rose for a seventh consecutive session to 4.58%, the highest level in a month, as traders repriced the outlook for tighter policy. The move came even as oil prices surged more than 5% after President Donald Trump declared the interim Iran ceasefire "over" while attending the NATO summit in Ankara, a development that would normally push yields higher on inflation fears alone. That the bond market needed no help from geopolitics to sell off underscored the force of the Fed's new messaging.
The AI Inflation Channel
The minutes showed 9 of 18 FOMC officials projecting at least one rate hike before year-end, with a few arguing a hike was already warranted. New Chair Kevin Warsh drove home the commitment to price stability, according to the record of the meeting. Yet the market's reaction went beyond the hawkish dot plot: traders focused on the Fed's explicit linkage between AI capital spending and persistent inflation.
The logic runs through the lopsided shape of US growth. First-quarter gross domestic product expanded at a 2.1% annualized rate, only about halfway back to the roughly 4% pace of last year's middle quarters, and it got there with almost no help from the consumer. The muscle came instead from business investment — barely 15% of the economy against consumption's 68% — as companies stockpile inputs ahead of the AI construction wave. Forcing so small an engine to carry the economy means running it hot enough to generate inflation in core services, where most household spending lands.
That dynamic is already visible in Europe and Australia, where factory sectors are humming along thanks to the same AI tailwinds while the broader economies slip into contraction as inflation forces service sectors to retrench. The US has not arrived there, but the recipe is the same.
What the Bond and Gold Markets Are Saying
Despite the hawkish minutes and the oil spike, the bond market's own inflation gauges tell a different story. Breakeven rates — the five-year and 10-year inflation expectations embedded in Treasury prices — have not merely given back the war premium; they have sunk below where they stood at the start of the year. Oil is still net higher on the year, yet expected inflation has dipped lower, suggesting traders suspect the Fed is fighting the last war.
Gold, which fell hard through the conflict as rising rates and a strong dollar punished a metal that yields nothing, dipped but never tested its lows, extending the bottoming process it began weeks ago. The US dollar tried to break higher and faded. Handed news it could have used to push rates up, the market declined the invitation.
Futures markets fully price one 25-basis-point rate hike this year — near-certain by October — and better-than-even odds of a second by early next year. But that is where conviction stops. By the end of 2027, markets put a 93% chance that the second hike is already reversed. Traders will grant the Fed its near-term hawkishness, but they refuse to extrapolate it.
For the S&P 500, which has been churning in a choppy range since mid-May and tracing the outline of a possible diamond-top reversal pattern, the standoff carries an unsettling implication. The last time the Fed used language this explicitly focused on a new inflation channel was in early 2022, when it began warning about supply-chain-driven price pressures — a period that preceded a 20% drawdown in the S&P 500 over the following six months. If the Fed leans against a fading inflation threat while a real downturn builds underneath it, the central bank could arrive with support only after significant damage has been done. The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for July 28-29.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.