In the grand theater of finance, where the curtain rises on the whims of war and the price of oil, Minneapolis Fed president Neel Kashkari has abandoned his quill and ink, no longer sketching in those fanciful 2026 cuts. Ah, the Iran war-a plot twist no economist could predict, muddling the inflation path like a spilled inkwell on a freshly penned manuscript.
- Neel Kashkari, the Minneapolis Fed’s leading actor, once believed inflation would cool its heels enough for a modest rate cut or two in 2026. But alas, the Iran war has rewritten the script, leaving him clutching his data like a playwright clutching a half-finished play.
- March’s inflation prints, he declares, are but a faint whisper in the wind-not enough to alter the Federal Open Market Committee’s solemn decree. “How long shall these energy prices persist?” he muses, stroking his chin with the gravitas of a man pondering the meaning of life.
- Yet, Kashkari remains the eternal optimist, insisting inflation will trend lower, though he warns against overzealous rate hikes lest they bruise the resilient labor market. A delicate balance, indeed, like walking a tightrope while juggling economic mandates.
A faint breeze in the economic storm
Kashkari’s latest soliloquy is one of caution. March’s data, he says, is but a faint breeze-not enough to stir the Fed’s policy statement from its slumber. “More data,” he intones, like a priest demanding penance, before the Fed can decide whether to wield the sword of inflation or shield the labor market.
In January, on the altar of CNBC, Kashkari proclaimed policy was “quite close to neutral,” yet inflation remained a stubborn specter. The economy, he admitted, was more resilient than his own predictions-a humbling moment for any economist.
Thus, he treads lightly, wary of promising too much, lest Trump’s tariffs and the war’s oil spike throw the inflation outlook into further chaos. A man of prudence, indeed, though one wonders if he sleeps with a graph under his pillow.
Energy prices: The economic pendulum
Energy costs, Kashkari laments, are the pendulum swinging wildly in this economic clockwork. At a Bloomberg Invest event, he posed the question: How long shall oil prices reign? Will they slow the march to the Fed’s 2% inflation target, or merely be a fleeting tempest?
Yet, he reminds us, the Fed must “watch both sides of our dual mandate,” lest they sacrifice employment on the altar of inflation. A delicate dance, like a bear trying to waltz without stepping on its partner’s toes.
Before the geopolitical storm, Kashkari saw inflation waltzing between 2.5% and 3%, but now? Now the war has obscured the path, leaving him to declare it “too soon” to know if those 2026 cuts are anything more than a distant dream.
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2026-05-01 21:59