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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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El WTI bajo enmascara el núcleo inflacionario, pero la Fed no puede ignorar que los salarios en servicios siguen presionando. Datos del BLS lo confirman.
WTIの下落がサービスインフレを隠蔽してるだけなら、Fedの「忍耐」は単なる先送りに過ぎない。次のCPIで現実を突きつけられるだけだ。
WTI drop feels like a band-aid on a bullet wound when services inflation’s still running hot-Fed’s boxed in.
Et si ce pétrole bon marché n’était qu’un leurre, comme ces promesses de lendemains qui chantent après une crise ? La Fed danse sur un volcan.
WTI at $68 and core PCE at 4%? Sounds like the Fed’s playing Jenga with the economy-one wrong move and the whole tower collapses.
Dus de Fed zit vast tussen dalende olieprijzen en een PCE die blijft plakken. Wie dacht dat dit makkelijk zou worden, snapt de markt niet.
4% de PCE core et on s’extasie sur un pétrole sous 70$ ? La Fed ne joue pas au yo-yo, Warsh le sait mieux que personne.
La désinflation énergétique ne doit pas masquer l’urgence d’une transition : les fonds responsables ont ici une carte à jouer.
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