What's Happening
The PCE inflation gauge held at 3% in Thursday's release, but underlying price pressures had accelerated for three consecutive months before the Iran conflict erupted. The Federal Reserve now faces compounded headwinds: pre-existing inflation momentum plus an energy shock from Middle East hostilities.
Market Impact
Rate-cut expectations have shifted sharply. The Fed's inflation problem predates the geopolitical shock, meaning policymakers cannot blame external forces for what was already a sticky domestic price environment. Oil and natural gas volatility will ripple through equities, with energy stocks and defensive sectors likely to diverge sharply.
Broader Implications
The timing is critical: the Fed was already behind the curve on inflation before the Iran war added supply-side risk. This constrains monetary policy flexibility and raises recession odds if energy prices spike further while demand remains resilient.