Jinse Finance reported that some senior officials of the Federal Reserve were more inclined to keep interest rates unchanged last month, highlighting policymakers' concerns that persistently high inflation still poses a threat to the US economy. Although the Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 25 basis points in September, the Fed meeting minutes showed that a "minority" of FOMC members would have supported keeping rates unchanged because inflation could remain above target. The minutes noted that this year's rise in inflation has caused progress toward the 2% target to "stall," and added that a minority of members "were concerned that if inflation does not return to target in a timely manner, long-term inflation expectations could rise."