Jamie Dimon has a feeling inflation will be the 'skunk at the party'--and the Iran conflict may already be enough to
scare off the Fed for good
When the U.S. and Israel launched attacks against Iran this weekend, prompting a military response across the Middle East, concerns spiraled from the humanitarian cost to the macroeconomic. On the latter, analysts have been carefully watching for signals that Iran may disrupt global oil supply, pushing prices higher as a result.
In the U.S., this would be an unpalatable outcome. Voters, stretched by the pandemic-era price rises and then dogged by concerns about tariff-related hikes, are nervous about any further threats to affordability.
Jamie Dimon, CEO of J.P. Morgan, shares their concern. Like many of his peers on Wall Street, hes not sold on the notion that a conflict in Iran will materially increase the cost of living in the United Statesthat is, unless it drags on past the month or so that President Trump has suggested.
Speaking at the companys annual global leveraged-finance conference, Dimon warned inflation may prove to be the skunk at the party. The proverbial economic mephitidae is unlikely to be triggered by a conflict in the Middle East alone, said the Wall Street veteran, though the threat it poses increases the longer the military action drags on.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/markets/jamie-dimon-has-a-feeling-inflation-will-be-the-skunk-at-the-party-and-the-iran-conflict-may-already-be-enough-to-scare-off-the-fed-for-good/ar-AA1Xr8xU