On March 11, the February CPI data released by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics acted like a stone thrown into a calm lake. The 2.4% year-on-year increase caused the inflation curve to stall at a critical level. Although housing rental pressure has eased, this report has yet to fully capture the energy premium following the U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on Iran in late February.
As the Strait of Hormuz, a global oil chokepoint, faces a substantial blockade, Brent crude has returned to the $100 mark. Inflation expectations are undergoing a dangerous shift from demand-driven to geopolitical-premium-driven. Market confidence in a June rate cut is being diluted by the smoke of conflict, while the resilience of the cryptocurrency market following deleveraging makes it a unique observation point in this macro storm.
When Energy is No Longer Just a Sub-item If the 0.5% month-on-month increase in energy in the February CPI data was merely a prelude, the current silence in the Strait of Hormuz is a true shift in the movement. As a passage for 20% of the world's crude oil and one-fifth of its liquefied natural gas (LNG), approximately 20 million barrels of liquidity pass through here daily.
The Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps' warning that not a single liter of oil will pass is no longer mere diplomatic rhetoric. Satellite data shows dense clusters of tankers stranded on both sides of the strait, with current oil exports plummeting to about 4 million barrels—less than a quarter of normal flow.
This structural supply disruption is being transmitted directly to the Fed's decision-making board via oil prices. Historical echoes of the 1990 Gulf War and the 2022 Russia-Ukraine conflict are clear: whenever energy-cost-driven inflation rises, the Fed's easing path is often forced to extend due to a defensive stance. Brent crude futures have now broken $100, and WTI crude has seen an intraday gain of over 8%. Goldman Sachs warns that if the blockage continues through late March, international oil prices could exceed the 2008 peak of $147.25 per barrel.
Wall Street traders are recalculating risks. Futures market data shows that the probability of a cumulative 25-basis-point rate cut by June has shifted to 46.8%, while expectations for a September cut have heated up significantly.
While economists at Morgan Stanley have barely maintained their baseline forecast of two rate cuts this year, they have added a rare note for extreme scenarios: if oil prices continue to fluctuate at triple-digit highs, the first rate cut could even be delayed beyond 2025. Andy Schneider, Senior U.S. Economist at BNP Paribas Securities, stated that recent oil price gains alone could push headline inflation up by 0.15 to 0.30 percentage points. The reappearance of the "Higher for Longer" ghost poses a systemic suppression on the valuation logic of global risk assets.
Unlike the pullback in the S&P 500, the cryptocurrency market has recently shown a peculiar sign of decoupling. Although BTC remains constrained between a Realized Price of $54,400 and a True Market Mean of $78,400, marginal sellers are drying up.
First is leverage clearing: the scale of leverage in the crypto market has dropped significantly, with the derivatives market entering a wave of deleveraging and speculative bubbles nearly fully receded. Second is on-chain defense: the SOPR index for short-term holders remains near 0.985, indicating that capital that entered recently has completed a round of capitulation, with chips transferring to more patient long-term holders.
The market is currently at a delicate point of symmetry: on one side are 1970s-style inflation concerns triggered by geopolitics; on the other is the completed deleveraging within risk assets.
For investors, the focus should no longer just be on when rates will be cut, but rather on which assets possess true liquidity resilience under the "double high" norm of high inflation and high interest rates.
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