JACKSON HOLE, WYOMING - The one thing Federal Reserve officials were in broad agreement about at their last meeting was this: not tipping their hands about what happens next.
Minutes released Wednesday showed a fractious meeting on many fronts last month when a divided Fed cut interest rates for the first time in a decade. But the consensus to not reveal their intentions was clear, and may show that the steady browbeating by President Donald Trump has begun to influence how the Fed communicates.
Undercommit, and it may throw markets off course and draw more fire from Trump, who has been relentless in demanding not one but a slew of rate cuts and even a return to crisis-era bond buying to supercharge a softening but still-growing economy.
Overcommit, and it looks like capitulation to the White House, a possible blow to the Fed's perceived status as an independent, technical agency that does not consider politics in its policy decisions.
FILE - Federal Reserve board member Jerome Powell speaks after President Donald Trump announced him as his nominee for the next chair of the Federal Reserve in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Nov. 2, 2017.
Trump adamant on rate cuts
Yet Trump has been adamant, particularly as market data has indicated some doubt about the future of the record-setting U.S. expansion, that the Fed should act to bolster an economy that seems on many fronts to be doing fine.
Safer in that situation to "be guided by incoming information and its implications for the economic outlook" and avoid "any appearance of following a preset course" of further rate cuts — in other words to stay mum.
There were serious policy disagreements at the last meeting when the Fed voted to cut the target policy rate 25 basis points, minutes of the meeting released Wednesday show.
Some wanted no cut at all, and two voting members dissented.
Some wanted a half-point cut, and in the last set of policymakers' economic projections, a near majority said rates should fall again by year's end.
But since then, in public, even those who wanted deeper cuts have dialed back their language a notch.
In a Financial Times column Wednesday, Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari framed his call for the Fed to use more "forward guidance" in terms of a promise not to raise rates, not a promise to cut them.
In his first comments after the July meeting, St. Louis Federal Reserve president James Bullard said the Fed would not move again in response to changes in trade policy: It had bought its "insurance" against the administration's trade war by cutting rates once and would now look at how the economic data responds.
All ears on Powell
But a return to "data dependence" at this point poses a dilemma for Fed chairman Jerome Powell, scheduled to speak here Friday in what will be a closely watched appearance at the central bank's annual policy retreat in the Wyoming mountains.
With bond markets again sending a warning signal about the near-term economic future as short-term rates move above long-term ones, Powell may need to say more about what the Fed plans, or at least what is influencing its thinking.
"(W)hat Powell has to say on Friday is going to be much, much more important than these minutes," said Mary Ann Hurley, vice president in fixed-income trading at D.A. Davidson in Seattle.
Is it inflation that is too weak, or job gains that may be too strong to sustain? If overseas data matters, would a German recession trigger lower U.S. rates?
"His main message is going to be some combination of trying to arrest the panic in fixed income markets without being seen as pandering to Trump," said Adam Posen, president of the Peterson Institute for International Economics.
When they cut rates in July, contrary to the usual sense of a strong consensus narrative about the reason why, different policymakers seemed motivated by a hodgepodge of reasons.
Demands from the White House were not among them. Fed officials insist they are not hostages to Trump. But he may be holding their tongue.