Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

A key policy goal is to steepen the yield curve by shrinking the Fed's balance sheet (raising long-term yields) and cutting short-term rates. However, the current oil shock prevents the necessary front-end rate cuts, creating an unintended economic drag and risking a growth slowdown.

Related Insights

A spike in oil prices could keep CPI inflation above 3%. In this environment, the Fed cannot cut rates to support a weakening economy, as doing so would spook bond traders, risk higher long-term rates, and make financial conditions even tighter, effectively taking them 'off the table.'

Historical precedent is unequivocal: central banks do not cut interest rates in response to an oil shock. Despite the negative growth impact, their primary concern is preventing the initial price spike from embedding into long-term inflation expectations. Market hopes for easing are contrary to all historical data.

Despite the economic risks from higher oil prices, the Federal Reserve is unlikely to cut interest rates. The central bank is firmly focused on high pre-existing inflation and rising inflation expectations, and geopolitical uncertainty will likely cause them to hold policy steady rather than provide stimulus.

In the early stages of a Fed easing cycle, short-term rates fall while long-term rates remain sticky, causing the yield curve to steepen. The rally in long-dated bonds only occurs much later, after investors get comfortable with low rates and begin chasing carry trades.

The yield curve is poised to steepen, similar to the 1970s OPEC-1 shock. Markets anticipate the incoming Fed chair will be dovish, like Arthur Burns was, and avoid hiking short-term rates into a supply-driven inflation shock. This will cause long-term inflation expectations and yields to rise faster than short-term rates.

The Fed plans to align its balance sheet duration with the Treasury's by reducing its holdings of long-term bonds. This would steepen the yield curve by raising long-term rates (hurting mega-caps) while simultaneously cutting the Fed Funds rate to ease pressure on smaller businesses with floating-rate debt.

The long end of the bond curve has moved up simply to reflect tighter short-term policy, but has not seen a meaningful expansion of risk premiums. This suggests the market is complacent, underestimating the risk that this oil shock could extend the period of above-target inflation for years, similar to the post-2022 experience.

The US economy's structure as an energy exporter, combined with the Federal Reserve's dual focus on both inflation and labor markets, means US yields react less dramatically to oil price spikes than European rates. This structural difference provides a relative buffer against energy-driven volatility.

The Federal Reserve is executing an underappreciated policy of shortening its balance sheet duration. This supports short-term rates while pressuring long-term bonds, causing a yield curve steepening that creates a structural headwind for long-duration assets like crypto and high-growth technology stocks.

An oil supply shock initially appears hawkishly inflationary, prompting central banks to hold or raise rates. However, once prices cross a critical threshold (e.g., >$100/barrel), it triggers severe demand destruction and recession, forcing a rapid policy reversal towards aggressive rate cuts.

The Fed's Yield Curve Steepening Plan is Stalled by the Oil Shock, Risking a Growth Slowdown | RiffOn