MacroSubscribers only Jun 26, 2026 at 23:044Add to bookmarks

WTI below $70 is usually good news. Not this time. With core PCE at +4.0%, energy disinflation masks services inflation and puts the Fed in an untenable position.
WTI is trading around $68-70/barrel at the end of June 2026, down 18% from its January peak ($85). On June 25, Yahoo Finance/Barron's highlights a paradox: low energy prices, typically deflationary, could become the Fed's next problem—not by compressing inflation, but by muddying the signal.
Energy disinflation is a mirage. First angle: low oil prices compress headline CPI/PCE but do not affect core PCE (+4.0%), which tracks services, rents, and insurance. The Fed cannot cut rates based on cheap oil if services continue to surge. Second angle—the trap: if oil falls due to slowing global demand (China exporting deflation, OECD stagnating), the Fed faces a stagflationary dilemma—growth decelerating while core inflation remains high. Cutting rates with core PCE >4% would be seen as monetary capitulation; not cutting amid rising unemployment as ideological stubbornness. This is precisely the scenario Goldman describes as a "prolonged hold."
The Fed/ECB divergence (4.25-4.50% vs. ECB at ~1.75% by end-2026) is the dominant macro variable for EUR/USD (target 1.04-1.06). Bond duration: favor short-term (US 2-year >5%) over long-term in a stagflation scenario. Energy stocks (XLE) are under pressure but act as a hedge if oil rebounds on OPEC+ decisions.
OPEC+ decision (August 2026 meeting): production cut = immediate oil rebound. Chinese demand: a fiscal stimulus from Beijing would change the equation. Warsh could surprise with a faster pivot than Goldman expects if employment deteriorates.
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WTI drop feels like a band-aid on a bullet wound when services inflation’s still running hot-Fed’s boxed in.
WTI at $68 and core PCE at 4%? Sounds like the Fed’s playing Jenga with the economy-one wrong move and the whole tower collapses.
Fed’s chasing ghosts-oil’s cheap but rents and wages aren’t. Warsh’s stuck between a rock and a soft landing fantasy.
Feels like the Fed’s playing whack-a-mole with inflation-knock down energy prices, services pop up. When does the music stop?
Fed post-Powell: Kevin Warsh and the New Monetary Era