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The Federal Reserve’s April Inflation Forecast Has Been Updated, and It’s a Good News-Bad News Scenario for Wall Street

Last week was another history-maker for Wall Street, with the benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) and iconic Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) launching to record-closing highs. Although the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) didn’t reach a record high, it’s a stone’s throw away from one.

Based on the performance of these indexes, you’d assume the U.S. economy and Wall Street are firing on all cylinders. But according to the latest inflation update from the Federal Reserve, things may not be as rosy as the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite imply.

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Fed Chair Jerome Powell delivering remarks. Image source: Official Federal Reserve Photo.

Roughly two months ago, on Feb. 28, President Donald Trump gave the order for U.S. military forces, along with Israel, to commence attacks against Iran. These actions spurred Iran to close the Strait of Hormuz to virtually all commercial vessels, throwing 20 million barrels of daily liquid petroleum shipments (roughly 20% of global demand) into limbo.

The law of supply and demand is straightforward: when demand for a good outstrips its supply, the price of that good rises until demand tapers off. The largest-ever global energy supply disruption sent crude oil prices soaring.

The immediate impact of this oil price shock was felt at the fuel pump. The national average price of a gallon of gas rose at its fastest pace in more than 30 years, while a gallon of diesel shot up by well over 40%, according to data from AAA.

But higher prices at the pump are just one part of the story. A significant uptick in energy prices threatens to meaningfully increase transportation and production costs for businesses, which could be devastating to a historically expensive stock market.

A calculator set next to several newspaper clippings warning of higher prices and inflation.
Image source: Getty Images.

In February, before the effects of the Iran war began showing up in trailing-12-month (TTM) U.S. inflation data, TTM inflation clocked in at 2.4%. One month later, in March, TTM inflation shot up 90 basis points to 3.3%. Although the stickiness of Trump’s tariffs in the goods sector isn’t helping, this jump was primarily tied to skyrocketing energy prices.

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