• Asks when higher real yields start to impact the US economy and industry.
    speaker1
  • Bob Michele
    Argues the impact is happening now, citing the recent shift from expecting Fed rate cuts to higher costs for consumers and businesses.
  • Asks how the Fed can react to this situation.
    speaker3
  • Bob Michele
    States there's no obvious solution at these levels. With $100 oil, JPMorgan sees growth slowing significantly and inflation rising, forcing the Fed to wait and see what breaks first: the labor market or persistent inflation.
  • Cites Rosenberg Research noting no equity panic despite high VIX, and asks how to measure panic in bonds versus equities.
    speaker1
  • Bob Michele
    Notes bond market volatility has been muted, making it a surprisingly orderly sell-off. Attributes market confidence to the belief the administration will find a political 'off-ramp' due to midterm elections and Middle East pressures.
  • Notes the US is a net oil exporter but highlights global exposure to Middle East oil, questioning how other central banks will react.
    speaker3
  • Bob Michele
    Finds the oil price surge to $100 puzzling given the initial Strait of Hormuz risk premium. Sees demand destruction likely at $120-$150. Contrasts the Fed's dual mandate with the ECB/BoE's single inflation mandate, expecting hawkish talk and rate hikes from them due to soaring headline inflation.
  • Asks about the cultural concept of 'Persian patience' in the Iran conflict, and if Iran will be patient.
    speaker1
  • Bob Michele
    Agrees, stating Iran has little else to do but can control global oil supply via the Strait of Hormuz with drones. This is the market's growing concern: the US may want an off-ramp, but Iran doesn't need to provide one.
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