Powell Says No Rate Hikes Despite Oil Shock — But Markets Aren’t Convinced

ON1010 Research — Economic News Analysis

According to CNBC, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell told Harvard University on Monday that the central bank sees no need for rate hikes despite oil’s surge to $95 following the Strait of Hormuz closure. What’s striking isn’t Powell’s dovish stance — it’s how out of step it feels with an economy where every $10 oil spike adds 0.6 percentage points to inflation.

Powell’s confidence rests on the idea that energy shocks are temporary and won’t shift long-term inflation expectations. That playbook worked in past crises when the US was a major oil importer. But today’s dynamics are different. As a net energy exporter, higher oil prices create a complex mix of benefits for US producers and pain for consumers. The real test isn’t whether this spike reverses — it’s whether businesses start embedding higher energy costs into their pricing models.

The Fed’s credibility hinges on threading an impossible needle: acknowledging that oil at $95 pressures inflation while insisting they won’t preemptively tighten. Powell can afford this stance only because core services inflation was settling around 2.5% before the crisis hit. If monthly CPI starts printing with a 1-handle — entirely possible with current oil levels — that confidence will be tested quickly.

Historically, investors have used Fed dovishness during energy crises as a signal to rotate toward sectors that benefit from higher commodity prices while hedging inflation exposure. You may want to consider how Powell’s commitment to hold rates steady changes the risk-reward calculus for energy-intensive industries facing margin pressure from the oil shock.

Bottom Line: Powell is betting the energy shock stays contained, but with oil up 44% since February and the Strait still closed, that’s looking like wishful thinking rather than sound policy.

Read more: CNBC Top News


ON1010.com provides economic education for investors. Nothing here is investment advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.

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