Oil Hits $100 as Fed’s Inflation Victory Lap Gets Interrupted

ON1010 Research — The Morning Bell
Premium Analysis

Oil’s surge back above $100 overnight — despite strategic reserve releases and reassuring Fed speeches — just shattered the neat little narrative that inflation was finally under control. Iran’s escalating shipping attacks in the Persian Gulf sent WTI crude up another 8% to $101.20, erasing weeks of careful central bank messaging in a matter of hours.

Here’s the uncomfortable truth bond markets are starting to price in: the Fed’s 2% inflation target was never about energy prices cooperating forever. Core CPI at 2.16% looked perfect last month, but that math assumed oil would stay well-behaved around $75. Now crude is 35% higher than its February average, and every dollar above $90 adds roughly 0.1 percentage points to headline inflation over the next three months. Denmark telling citizens to avoid driving isn’t just dramatic — it’s a preview of how quickly energy shocks can flip consumer behavior.

The 10-year Treasury’s climb to 4.15% tells you bond investors already see the math changing. That’s a 23 basis point move in just two weeks, and it’s happening while the 2-year sits relatively calm at 3.57%. This isn’t about Fed policy uncertainty — it’s about inflation uncertainty. When long-term bonds sell off faster than short-term ones, the market is pricing in persistent price pressures, not temporary spikes.

Premium Analysis

Continue reading the full analysis

Enter the email address associated with your ON1010 Premium subscription.


Not a Premium subscriber yet?

Subscribe to Premium

Monthly ($39/mo) or Annual ($240/yr, save 49%)