Rising Oil Prices Weigh on Inflation

The continued amplification of the conflict in the Middle East has created heightened uncertainty in financial markets. Crude oil in particular had a volatile week, beginning with a historic overnight spike to $119.50 last Sunday, March 8, as the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz triggered immediate supply shock fears before retreating to $94.77 by Monday afternoon as investors weighed the possibility of a shorter conflict and potential government interventions.

Skyrocketing oil prices were accompanied by mixed inflation readings last week. The headline Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation rate held steady in February at 2.4 percent annually, while core CPI, which excludes more volatile food and energy costs, rose a modest 0.22 percent for the month. This suggested that, according to this measure, inflationary pressures were holding steady before the recent energy shocks. However, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure, Core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) data for January—released on a lag due to the government shutdown—revealed a much hotter monthly increase of 0.4 percent. This pushed the annual core rate to 3.1 percent as of January 2026, the same level reached at the end of 2023. In other words, the Fed has made essentially no progress toward reaching its 2 percent inflation target over the past two years.

The acceleration of PCE—an inflation gauge preferred by the Fed because it excludes volatile food/energy prices as well as adjusts for consumer behavior—came on the heels of weak jobs data published the prior week, which showed that job growth has pulled back toward zero. Nonfarm payrolls averaged a mere 6,000 over the past three months, with the six- and nine-month averages residing at –1,000 and –4,000, while the year-over-year gain for February 2026 fell to just 0.1 percent.

This historically low growth rate reflects an economy that added only approximately 156,000 jobs over the entire 12-month period, averaging just 13,000 jobs per month (compared to the 124,000 monthly average in 2024) in a further sign of a softening labor market. This is a condition that has occurred only in periods of economic weakness in data stemming back to 1950. And while history can be an imperfect guide, we believe this continues to define the narrow and delicate balance the economy remains in: labor weakness but with still heightened and sticky inflation.

Factor in uncertainty surrounding tariff policy, the continued geopolitical unrest in the Middle East and an impending changing of the guard at the U.S. central bank following Kevin Warsh’s nomination to replace Jerome Powell as Fed chair, and monetary policymakers have their work cut out for them as they attempt to carry out the Fed’s dual mandate of stable prices and maximum employment.

All this and more will come to a head next week as the Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) prepares to meet this Tuesday and Wednesday. Markets are pricing in a nearly 100 percent probability that the Fed will keep interest rates steady given the combination of sticky inflation, poor jobs data and the recent geopolitical energy shock.