Thoughts on the Market

Oil Shock Hits the U.S. Consumer

55 snips
Mar 18, 2026
Ariana Salvatore, Head of U.S. Policy Strategy at Morgan Stanley, offers quick takes on policy moves, geopolitical risks, and market implications. She discusses how long the oil disruption might last, what indicators to watch, why policy offsets may fall short, and who among consumers will feel the biggest squeeze.
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INSIGHT

Oil Disruption Likely To Be Prolonged

  • A prolonged oil disruption is likely to last longer than initially expected and meaningfully tighten global supply.
  • Ariana Salvatore cites low tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, limited policy offsets, and a 10–13 million barrel per day net supply deficit as drivers.
INSIGHT

Gas Price Spike Directly Cuts Consumer Spending

  • Higher oil and gasoline prices hit consumers directly and quickly because fuel is hard to substitute.
  • Arunima Sinha estimates a 50% oil price rise lasting 2–3 quarters could cut real personal spending growth by ~40 bps after 12 months, mainly via durables.
INSIGHT

Initial Consumer Cushion Then Greater Pullback

  • The initial consumer response to higher gasoline may be muted but strengthens over time as savings and short-term credit are drawn down.
  • Arunima Sinha notes consumers might absorb early costs for a month, then reduce consumption if the shock persists.
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