How a US-Iran Deal Could Influence the Economy and Financial Markets

Key takeaways:

  • Lower oil prices will bring timely relief for consumers as summer travel begins
  • The Fed’s hawkish tilt suggests it’s focused on more than just elevated energy prices
  • Lower oil prices point to a peak in energy-driven inflation

The US-Iran conflict – and its impact on oil prices – has dominated headlines over the past three months. Higher oil prices have pushed inflation to a three‑year high, reshaping the Federal Reserve’s rate outlook. While policymakers typically look through temporary, geopolitically driven shocks, this episode comes at a challenging time. Repeated supply disruptions have kept inflation above the Fed’s 2.0% target for more than five years, drawing the attention of new Fed Chair Warsh. Below, we outline how a US‑Iran deal – and a potential decline in oil prices – could influence the US economy, the rate outlook and financial markets in the months ahead.

Oil prices will continue to cool down, but it may take time

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude has fallen sharply from April’s peak near $113 per barrel to below $80 this week, a nearly 30% drop that signals a meaningful unwind of geopolitical risk. Markets are beginning to anticipate a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and are taking comfort that the region’s oil infrastructure has emerged largely intact. But the harder phase now begins: restoring supply.

Three key hurdles must be cleared before Persian Gulf exports – currently around six million barrels per day – can move back toward pre‑war levels that were three times higher at ~20 million barrels per day. First, Iranian naval mines need to be removed. Second, shipping crews must return. And third, shuttered oilfields need to restart production. Our base case is that full normalization may not occur until late July at the earliest. As supply gradually recovers and global inventories begin to stabilize, that should put additional downward pressure on prices, potentially driving WTI toward our year‑end target of ~$70 per barrel.

Falling oil prices will provide consumer relief

Despite higher gasoline prices and broader inflation pressures, the US consumer has remained remarkably robust this year. Retail sales rose at their fastest pace since January 2023 in May, while real‑time activity metrics, such as restaurant bookings and department store spending, have steadily moved higher versus last year. That said, early cracks are beginning to emerge.

With inflation still elevated and the boost from large tax refunds fading, sentiment has fallen to a record low, real wage growth has turned negative for two consecutive months, and the personal savings rate has dropped to its lowest level since 2022. Lower gasoline prices should provide timely relief – particularly for lower‑income consumers – as the summer travel season begins. With consumption driving ~70% of GDP, a still‑resilient consumer should continue to support economic growth and underpin our positive view on the consumer discretionary sector.

Read more: Hawkish-Leaning Committee, Reform-Minded Chair: Warsh’s First Fed Meeting