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Wosh’s Challenge: The Federal Reserve Power Transition Amid a Resurgence of Inflation
1. The Fed’s Leadership Change Meets an Inflation Rebound: The Rate Cut Promise Faces Tests
At the start of the year, markets generally expected the Fed to begin a rate-cut cycle in 2026, but this premise is unraveling. The direct cause is the rapid rise in energy prices—international oil prices have climbed to about $100 per barrel, pushing the U.S. overall inflation rate to 3.3% in March. More importantly, the transmission effects of energy prices will spread over the coming months to a wider range of goods and services prices. Historical experience shows that at this stage, easing monetary policy typically amplifies inflation expectations and weakens policy credibility.
Meanwhile, structural inflation pressures have not eased. Service-sector inflation (less volatile and more able to reflect endogenous demand) remains resilient, and the rate-cut logic supported by AI narratives is also disputed. Wosh previously argued that improving production efficiency with artificial intelligence is a reason to support rate cuts, but multiple Fed officials (including Vice Chair Jefferson and Board Member Barr) have pointed out that AI may push up inflation in the short term (due to large-scale capital expenditures), and that in the long run it will raise the neutral interest rate. This means that technological progress may actually make monetary policy relatively tighter rather than prompting an early shift toward easing.
2. A Policy Dilemma: Political Pressure vs. Economic Constraints
Trump continues to pressure for rate cuts, but both inflation data and internal Fed judgments point to a more cautious path. The March CPI report may have been “inflated” by an energy “explosion,” but the core data has been weak for the second consecutive month, indicating there is not yet a clear second-round effect. Fargona Credit believes this raises the threshold for the Fed to seriously consider rate hikes, but it also lifts the threshold for rate cuts. Fed officials generally say they are satisfied with the current interest-rate level, and the next step depends entirely on how the oil shock evolves: if conditions ease and oil prices fall back, rate cuts are still being considered; if inflation proves stubborn, they are prepared to keep rates higher for longer, and even do not rule out rate hikes.
For Kevin Wosh, securing the nomination itself is not the biggest obstacle; the real challenge is whether he can deliver on his political commitments in an environment where inflation is rebounding and room for rate cuts is being compressed. This power transition will directly determine the dollar’s medium-term outlook—if the Fed is forced to keep rates high or even restart rate hikes, the dollar will receive new support; conversely, if political pressure outweighs economic data, the dollar’s credibility may be damaged.
Strategic Implications
The current market is not dominated by a single logic, but by multiple contradictions coexisting: energy shocks alongside “shadow supply,” demand for dollar safe-haven assets clashing with policy uncertainty, the long-term allocation logic for gold battling against short-term rate suppression, and a reassessment of policy paths brought about by the Fed leadership change. Investors should deal cautiously with the coming high-volatility period. The key variables to watch are no longer the simple “safe-haven/risk” binary, but:
1. The hidden elasticity of actual energy supply (can the “dark fleet” continue to make up the shortfall?);
2. The Fed’s tolerance for second-round inflation effects (will core data continue to stay weak?);
3. The real progress of geopolitical negotiations under extreme pressure (the trajectory after the ceasefire agreement expires);
4. The pace of the Fed power transition and policy signals (Wosh’s nomination hearing and remarks).
Over the next ten days, as the ceasefire agreement expires, the naval blockade advances, and bank earnings are released, market volatility is expected to surge sharply. It is recommended that investors reduce directional heavy positions, focus more on structural hedging tools (such as gold, energy stocks, and volatility products), and remain alert for knock-on effects in niche markets, such as yen intervention and lithium prices staying at high levels. Before the macro fog clears, patience and flexibility matter more than predictions. #Gate广场四月发帖挑战 #美军封锁霍尔木兹海峡