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Home.forex news reportIran conflict poses new risk to US economic resilience

Iran conflict poses new risk to US economic resilience

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By Howard Schneider

WASHINGTON, March 2 (Reuters) – A U.S. economy that has weathered a year of trade, immigration and other shocks now faces a new test likely to ratchet up uncertainty after President Donald Trump’s decision to launch open-ended attacks against Iran with the stated goal of toppling the Middle Eastern country’s long-ruling Islamist government.

With counter-strikes underway throughout the ‌region and Trump saying the conflict could go on for weeks at least, analysts focused on a long list of imponderables as oil prices jumped over the weekend from $70 to nearly $80 ‌a barrel and shipping through the strategic oil lanes in the Strait of Hormuz began grinding down.

Though the U.S. is more buffered from energy shocks than many of its allies because of domestic oil and gas production, the global impact on trade, prices and ​investment could spill back and undermine what had been a developing bullish growth outlook for this year.

A recent Conference Board survey showed CEOs’ confidence in the outlook for the U.S. economy and their particular industries had jumped, but nearly 60% said there was a high risk geopolitical tensions could be a disrupting force. The World Bank in its most recent review of the U.S. economy described the outlook as “buoyant,” an assessment that will now have to survive the tumult of an unpredictable conflict in a key oil-producing region, with implications for global shipping, supply chains, and commodity prices.

“A pillar of our 2026 outlook was the observed ‘fading of caution’ regarding U.S. policy. Early-year ‌data suggested that businesses were moving past the paralysis in hiring and ⁠non-tech capex (capital expenditure) and beginning to deploy their resilient profits and capital,” Joseph Lupton, an economist at JPMorgan, wrote in a note over the weekend after the U.S. bombardment of Iran had begun. “This nascent recovery is now at risk. A military war, layered on top of the ongoing U.S, ‘war on trade,’ could reignite concerns over ⁠global stability.”

The extent of that impact, and whether, for example, it influences the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, depends on how much the conflict raises global oil prices, and whether it threatens to intensify and broaden over time or evolve into a more internal Iranian power struggle following the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei in an air strike.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022 posed similar global risks. The U.S. central bank’s initial reaction to that conflict was dovish, ​as ​officials scaled back plans for a large initial interest rate hike that spring.



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