Good morning,
It was an eventful week, chock-full of central bank announcements. Last week’s policy decisions were ultimately shaped by the Middle East conflict and its inflationary impact through energy markets. Brent crude has topped US$119/barrel this month and is up about 50%, while WTI – although remaining elevated – has been somewhat contained south of US$100.
While we all have our own views on current developments, there are two principal ways the Middle East conflict could play out. First, a resolution, or ceasefire. Second, there is a prolonged conflict.
A de-escalation would obviously be the better of the two options, not only on a humanitarian ground, but also from the market’s perspective. A resolution would prompt an unwind in rate-hike expectations and, of course, energy prices would fall. Naturally, the quicker a resolution, the faster the market moves. A prolonged conflict will likely keep energy prices elevated and heighten stagflation risk, as global growth would take a sizeable hit, triggering a risk-off move that would benefit safe havens.
As of writing, and unless I missed something over the weekend, the conflict is not slowing, and it is now in its fourth week. US President Donald Trump, despite his comments, appears to be caught between a rock and a hard place, and it is all about the Strait of Hormuz.
Central banks do not have a crystal ball
Aside from the RBA – which raised its cash rate by 25 bps to 4.10%, albeit just with a narrow 5-4 vote split – several central banks also kept their policy rates steady.
While we did have some central bank officials comment on rate hikes, I cannot help but think the week was a case of markets writing cheques the central banks had not signed. Frankly, not one bank explicitly committed to policy tightening.
Ultimately, central banks do not have a crystal ball, and unless you are privy to the inner workings of the Department of War, you (we) have absolutely no idea how long this conflict will last. This is what will determine the medium-term outlook for inflation. If a resolution comes in thick and fast, this will be a temporary price shock and follow-on effects should be minor. However, a prolonged war and continued elevated energy prices would be particularly destructive, feeding through to the broader economy and causing ripple effects on wages and food, for example, which would likely lead central banks to actually increase rates. Time will tell.