Watch live: Powell gives remarks as Federal Reserve keeps rates steady amid Iran conflict
Global stocks and bonds fell sharply as escalating conflict involving trump-considers-draft-for-iran-war-as-oil-hits-119.html" class="story-link" title="Trump hasn’t ruled out a draft for war with Iran — but is conscription constitut">Iran drove oil and gas prices higher. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell warned that rising energy costs could fuel inflation and limit potential rate cuts. The market selloff reflects growing concerns that Middle East tensions could derail economic recovery plans.
The selloff reflects legitimate concerns about supply chain disruptions and energy costs that could reignite inflation just as it was coming under control. Investors are rightfully pricing in risks of prolonged conflict affecting global oil supplies and forcing central banks to maintain tighter monetary policy longer than expected.
While energy price increases will impact headline inflation temporarily, core economic fundamentals remain sound. Central banks have tools to manage through energy-driven inflation spikes, and markets may be overreacting to what could prove to be a temporary disruption rather than a fundamental shift in economic trajectory.
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