Thoughts on the Market

Economic Roundtable: Energy Shock & Central Banks’ Action

57 snips
Apr 14, 2026
Chetan Ahya, Chief Asia Economist (Asia growth and energy exposure). Jens Eisenschmidt, Chief Europe Economist (euro area inflation and ECB policy). Michael Gapen, Chief U.S. Economist (U.S. inflation and oil shock impacts). They discuss the Iran-driven oil shock, how energy prices ripple into inflation and growth, and how central banks in the U.S., Europe and Asia might react.
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ADVICE

Avoid Expecting Fed Hikes From Energy Spike

  • Stay with a Fed on hold or easing stance rather than expecting further hikes in response to the oil shock.
  • Michael Gapen argues the Fed should avoid raising rates into an energy-driven slowdown and can cut if core inflation moderates later this year.
INSIGHT

Oil Shock Raises Headline Not Core Inflation

  • Oil shocks raise headline inflation but usually have limited second-round effects on core inflation in the US.
  • Michael Gapen notes higher oil can cause demand destruction and hiring weakness, creating non-linear growth effects rather than persistent core inflation.
INSIGHT

ECB More Forced To React To Inflation

  • The ECB faces stronger incentives to act on inflation because it has a single inflation mandate and historically larger second-round effects.
  • Jens Eisenschmidt expects discussion of hikes with a June move possible, partly as a signaling tool to stabilize inflation expectations.
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