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The Federal Reserve's Iran War Inflation Problem — Why Rate Cuts Are Now Off the Table

| 2 min read| By EuroBulletin24 briefing
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The Fed was planning rate cuts in 2026 before the Iran war. Here is why oil at $109 and gas at $4 have changed everything — and what this means for your mortgage and savings.

The Federal Reserve's 2026 monetary policy trajectory — which entering the year included specific market expectations of two to three rate cuts whose implementation would have reduced mortgage rates, credit card rates, and the specific cost of variable-rate debt that millions of American households carry — has been fundamentally altered by the Iran war's specific inflation dynamics.

For Chicago Fed President Goolsbee's specific communication: his CBS News statement represents the particular form of Fed official signaling whose specific purpose is to manage market expectations without constituting official FOMC policy guidance. His 'optimism has waned' characterisation is the specific way that central bankers say 'we are not cutting rates this year' without yet formally announcing it.

For the specific inflation mechanism: the Iran war's inflation is supply-side and cost-push, not demand-driven. Oil at $109 raises the specific input costs of every industry that uses energy — which is every industry. Natural gas at 60 percent premium raises heating, electricity, and industrial production costs. The tariffs implemented April 5 add import cost inflation to the energy and food inflation already accumulating. These specific pressures cannot be resolved by raising interest rates, whose mechanism works by cooling consumer demand rather than addressing supply-side cost increases.

For the mortgage market impact: 30-year fixed mortgage rates had been trending toward 6 percent in early 2026 on rate-cut expectations. Without those cuts, the specific mortgage rate reduction that millions of American homeowners and prospective buyers had been planning around does not materialise. The specific housing market freeze — where few existing homeowners refinance or move because they cannot give up their 2020-2021 era 3 percent mortgages — continues for another year minimum.

For the savings rate implication: the specific irony of inflation without rate cuts is that savers who locked in higher-rate CDs and savings accounts in 2023-2024 see their real returns eroded by inflation while variable-rate borrowers see no relief. The particular financial pressure falls most specifically on middle-income households whose specific combination of debt and insufficient savings creates the greatest vulnerability to persistent inflation without the wage growth that inflation has historically eventually produced.

#federal-reserve#inflation#iran-war#rate-cuts#economy#2026
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