The Real Risk Isn’t Inflation Panic—It’s a Slow Growth Squeeze

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Natixis argues that the current oil shock matters less because it revives 1970s inflation—and more because it quietly erodes an already softening U.S. growth backdrop.

  • The U.S. economy is far less energy-sensitive than in prior oil shocks, limiting the direct inflation hit relative to past cycles.
  • Markets still appear to view the energy spike as temporary, with inflation expectations suggesting a one-time shock rather than a lasting regime shift.
  • The bigger concern is consumer weakness: soft labor data, limited fiscal impulse and rising fuel costs could weigh on spending more than consensus expects.

If oil stays high for longer, the next repricing may come not from inflation fear—but from growth disappointment.

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