Wall Street is trying to look past a nasty inflation print, but the numbers point to the same culprit: the war in Iran and the spike in energy prices it unleashed. March CPI is expected to jump 0.9 percent, pushing annual inflation to 3.4 percent, while gasoline could rise 23 percent in the biggest monthly increase on record. Futures were little changed before the release, a sign traders have been waiting to see whether the shock turns into a one-month jolt or a longer squeeze on prices, wages and Federal Reserve policy.
The market reaction has already been mixed. Brent crude traded at $96 a barrel after falling 12 percent this week, helping stocks rebound even as yields stayed elevated and rate-cut bets slipped. If inflation does land where economists expect, it would sit above average wage growth of 3.5 percent and erase the pay gains that had been outrunning prices for nearly three years. That leaves consumers with less room to absorb higher fuel costs, and it keeps pressure on bond markets and rate expectations.
There is also a stranger edge to the same story: the war is spilling into prediction markets. The White House warned staff not to use non-public information to trade on platforms such as Kalshi or Polymarket after reports raised concerns about possible betting around Trump’s Iran pause, while lawmakers are pushing regulators to investigate suspicious trades and to bar wagers tied to war or military action. That puts a popular, fast-growing corner of finance under a harsher spotlight just as it is drawing more money and more political scrutiny.
For investors, the message is not just that inflation is hot again. The more awkward question is whether markets are pricing in a quick de-escalation that may not arrive, even as energy shocks filter through to airfares, goods prices and consumer budgets over the next few months. Nuveen’s warning that further escalation remains underpriced fits the mood: calm trading today can still sit on top of a much rougher path ahead.