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FXTRADING Financial Focus (Asia-Pacific 05/13)Energy Shock Lifts US Inflation, Delays Fed Cuts
Abstract:Signs of rising inflation have re-emerged in the United States, with the April Consumer Price Index climbing to 3.8% year-on-year, well above previous market expectations. Although the monthly increas

Signs of rising inflation have re-emerged in the United States, with the April Consumer Price Index climbing to 3.8% year-on-year, well above previous market expectations. Although the monthly increase slowed to 0.6% in April compared with the 0.9% pace seen over the prior two months, the key issue is that the main driver behind inflation has not disappeared. Instead, price pressure is becoming increasingly concentrated in the energy sector.
Data showed gasoline prices surged more than 28% from a year earlier in April. After previous actions involving the United States and Israel against Iran, Tehran later responded by focusing attention on shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz, quickly pushing the global energy market back into a tense situation. The Strait of Hormuz handles a large share of global crude oil and liquefied natural gas transportation, meaning even a small escalation in tensions can trigger sharp swings in oil prices. Markets are now no longer only worried about a temporary rise in oil prices, but whether elevated energy costs could once again become a long-term problem.
Excluding food and energy, April core consumer prices rose 2.8% year-on-year and 0.4% month-on-month. While inflation still remains above the Federal Reserves target, the figures at least suggest that the energy shock has not yet fully spread into other sectors of the economy. In other words, the US economy currently looks more like it is facing a classic imported inflation shock. Energy costs are first driving up production, transportation, and logistics expenses, while consumer demand itself has not strengthened at the same pace.
The real pressure on American consumers is now beginning to show up in income data. Inflation-adjusted average hourly earnings fell 0.3% year-on-year in April, marking the first decline in real wages in nearly three years. Many households are no longer worried about whether they have jobs, but whether wage growth can keep up with living costs. Lower- and middle-income groups are being hit especially hard as energy, food, insurance, and housing-related expenses continue rising at the same time, rapidly squeezing disposable income.
That pressure is also starting to spread toward the corporate sector. US home appliance manufacturer Whirlpool recently reported quarterly revenue falling nearly 10% year-on-year, with management directly describing industry demand as approaching recession-like conditions. High interest rates have already weakened housing activity and durable goods consumption, and rising energy prices are now making consumers even more willing to delay large purchases.
At the start of the year, markets broadly expected the Federal Reserve to gradually cut interest rates during 2026 in order to ease slowing economic conditions. However, with the renewed energy shock pushing inflation risks higher again, the Fed has clearly shifted into a wait-and-see stance. Policymakers now need to reassess how long tensions in the Middle East may last and whether rising energy prices could eventually spread into rents, services, and wider consumer sectors. Meanwhile, the White House continues pressuring the Fed to support the economy and stabilize market sentiment through rate cuts. Donald Trump has recently criticized the Federal Reserve for being overly cautious, while markets remain divided over whether Kevin Warsh, who is expected to replace Jerome Powell, would pursue a more accommodative policy approach in the future.
Looking ahead, the US economy could enter a far more sensitive phase over the coming months. If energy prices remain elevated while consumption and employment begin slowing at the same time, the United States may face a situation where weaker growth and persistent inflation coexist. For businesses, profit margins would come under further pressure. For households, consumer confidence could continue deteriorating. For policymakers, the path for interest rates would become increasingly difficult to judge. From FXTRADINGs perspective, the biggest risk facing the US economy right now is that the energy shock is gradually eroding household income, consumer spending power, and corporate profitability. If these pressures continue expanding, the probability of a broader economic slowdown in the months ahead will likely increase further.

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