Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Oil Hits $90 as Middle East Crisis Triggers Global Stagflation Fears

Oil prices broke $90/barrel this week amid escalating US-Israel-Iran tensions, pushing Treasury yields to April highs and reviving 1970s-style stagflation concerns. Central banks from the Federal Reserve to the Bank of England face the same dilemma: raising rates to fight inflation deepens slowdowns, while cutting rates to support growth accelerates price increases.

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Oil Hits $90 as Middle East Crisis Triggers Global Stagflation Fears
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Oil surged past $90/barrel this week as conflict between the US, Israel, and Iran intensified, driving gold up 1% and silver 2% while equity markets sold off globally. Treasury yields reached their highest levels since April 2025 as investors priced in inflation risks from the energy shock.

Weak US employment data and a weakening dollar compounded concerns. The combination of rising prices and slowing growth has revived stagflation fears not seen since the 1970s, when oil shocks crippled Western economies.

The crisis exposes a global policy dilemma. The Federal Reserve's Ample Reserves Framework—which manages monetary policy through interest on reserves rather than active balance sheet management—faces its toughest test. Raising rates to combat inflation would deepen economic slowdowns, while cutting rates to support growth would accelerate price increases.

The Bank of England faces identical pressures. Its Monetary Policy Committee noted that "risks to inflation from weaker demand and a loosening labour market remain," signaling that "Bank Rate is likely to be reduced further, though decisions on additional easing would become a closer call."

Former Fed officials are proposing a new monetary accord between the Treasury and central bank. Richard Clarida suggested a framework for the Fed to work with the Treasury and housing agencies Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to shrink its balance sheet over time.

Critics warn such coordination could compromise central bank independence. Tim Duy argued the accord "could look more like a framework for yield-curve control" that "explicitly ties monetary operations to deficits" rather than insulating the Fed from political pressure.

The debate echoes the 1951 Treasury-Fed Accord, which freed the central bank from supporting government bond prices after World War II. Ron Paul called the 1971 decision to end the gold standard "one of the biggest things that ever happened in monetary history," highlighting how fundamental monetary framework changes shape economic outcomes for decades.

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