TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Brent rises as energy crunch fears worsen

8m 6s1,176 mots198 segmentsEnglish

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0:00

Brent [music] crude had been hovering

0:01

around $105 a barrel today after spiking

0:04

to about $107 to start the day. My next

0:07

guest believes the global economy will

0:09

experience an oil supply shock as a

0:11

result of what's going on in the Middle

0:12

East. Let's go to Doug Pede, chief US

0:14

investment strategist at BCA Research.

0:16

Doug, thanks for joining us today.

0:18

Thanks for having me. So, you believe

0:20

there will be a supply shock. Is a Asia

0:23

already in that scenario and how long

0:25

before we see it in North America?

0:28

Well, it sure does feel like Asia is

0:29

already in that scenario when you have

0:33

school weeks being shortened, work weeks

0:35

being shortened,

0:37

jet fuel being rationed. Those are the

0:40

sorts of things that we would expect to

0:42

see

0:43

as Europe begins to run out of

0:48

cushions in their supply of crude oil

0:51

and liquefied natural gas and other

0:55

refined products like jet fuel and other

0:59

derivatives, other things that come from

1:01

natural gas like fertilizer, other

1:04

things that come from crude oil and

1:06

other petroleum products.

1:08

For North America, because both the US

1:10

and Canada export energy, what are the

1:14

things

1:15

we could do to sort of avoid or make

1:18

sure that the shock doesn't deepen. What

1:19

do you think the US would stop

1:20

exporting?

1:23

The issue with the US, it's funny, it's

1:25

not so much a crude oil issue, but

1:28

apparently our refineries that turn

1:31

crude oil into gasoline that fire

1:33

internal combustion engines and

1:35

automobiles

1:36

are set up to process sour crude,

1:39

not the sweet light crude that is what

1:43

is mainly produced in the United States.

1:45

So, even though you could see the United

1:47

States as

1:49

since it's a net exporter of crude oil

1:51

as energy sufficient from a crude oil

1:53

standpoint,

1:55

crude oil doesn't make an automobile go.

1:57

Only gasoline does. And we have to send

2:00

our crude out elsewhere for the most

2:03

part to have it refined, turned into

2:04

gasoline before we can bring it back and

2:07

use it for transportation. We can't just

2:10

turn it into diesel fuel for trucks and

2:12

ships and

2:13

trains. So,

2:16

it's fair to say that the US is more

2:19

insulated. It's fair to say that Canada

2:21

is more insulated, but

2:24

no country is an island in the global

2:26

economy. And

2:29

global trade matters for every economy.

2:34

And therefore, while North America will

2:38

feel the impact

2:40

after Asia and Europe do, it's not going

2:44

to escape the impact entirely.

2:46

Okay, because we've seen that spike at

2:48

the pumps for people in North America,

2:51

what do you expect from the Federal

2:52

Reserve then next week?

2:55

We don't think Federal Reserve is going

2:56

anywhere next week or for the next

2:58

couple of meetings. Now that the supply

3:02

shock

3:03

is in train, is on the way,

3:07

we don't believe the FOMC will be able

3:10

to cut rates until it has definitive

3:13

evidence

3:15

that this supply shock

3:17

has dissipated

3:19

and that

3:20

inflation is definitely on its way back

3:25

to the 2% target.

3:27

Now, the Fed was always sort of in that

3:29

situation that it needed to be able to

3:31

say, "Look,

3:33

we're on our way to the target to

3:35

justify cutting." But the existence of a

3:38

supply shock has pushed forward the date

3:42

when it will be able to make that

3:44

declaration. So, we think that the Fed

3:46

is likely on hold for

3:48

most if not all of 2026.

3:52

How would you say consumers are holding

3:54

up in the US? I know there's new

3:56

consumer sentiment data out of one if

3:58

you can factor that in.

4:00

Sure. Look, what we found last year that

4:03

was a surprise, frankly, to my team at

4:07

BCA

4:08

was that you don't need any job creation

4:11

for households to be able to spend

4:14

because over the last eight months of

4:16

last year, May through December,

4:18

the United States lost jobs.

4:21

But

4:23

households kept on spending.

4:25

Well, they did it partially because

4:28

equity prices have risen so much and

4:31

home prices have risen so much such that

4:35

households had enough wealth to be able

4:37

to draw on. They were able to draw on

4:39

their assets

4:41

and they or their past income, let's

4:43

call it.

4:44

And they didn't need the

4:47

current inflows so much to be able to

4:50

keep spending. That we think is going to

4:53

be a feature of the US economy going

4:54

forward because over the last 40 years,

4:58

we've had tremendous bull markets in

5:00

equities and other financial markets.

5:03

And the estate tax in the United States

5:07

has been rendered very nearly toothless

5:10

so that the combination of really

5:13

powerful rising asset values for both

5:17

financial instruments and for homes

5:21

coupled with

5:22

the fact that those gains are now

5:24

allowed to compound across generations

5:27

with again the estate tax, the

5:29

inheritance tax being rendered almost

5:32

impotent, that has allowed households to

5:35

build up a lot of wealth.

5:36

And that wealth turns out to have

5:40

supported spending in 2025 even when

5:44

there was no job creation. Now, three

5:47

months into 2026,

5:50

we have the January, February, and March

5:52

employment data.

5:53

We have averaged 68,000 new jobs a

5:56

month.

5:57

That's not a ton, but it's a whole lot

5:59

better than the 10,000 we had for the

6:01

whole year in 2025. And like I said,

6:04

contraction in the last eight months of

6:06

2025. So, it appears that there is some

6:09

help on the way

6:11

for the labor market, some help on the

6:13

way for household incomes, and that

6:15

should allow households to be able to

6:18

keep spending such that the expansion

6:20

continues in the United States. I'm

6:22

almost out of time time with you, but I

6:24

do want to ask you about labor because

6:25

we're now seeing a pickup in the speed

6:28

that the big tech companies are are

6:30

laying off, right? Meta is going to lay

6:31

off 10% of its workforce. Microsoft is

6:34

looking at buyouts in that way. How

6:37

concerned are you about that part of the

6:39

equation?

6:41

Look, it is very important. What we've

6:43

been in over the last year is a no

6:46

hiring, no firing stasis. There's been

6:49

very little hiring, but counterbalancing

6:51

that, there've been very, very few

6:53

layoffs.

6:54

You would therefore

6:56

potentially get nervous when you see the

6:58

headlines like Meta and Microsoft and

7:01

Nike announcing these reductions in

7:03

force. However,

7:05

the Challenger, Gray and Christmas tally

7:08

of layoff announcements doesn't

7:10

correlate with much of anything.

7:13

So, these announcements are going to go

7:15

right into that Challenger, Gray and

7:17

Christmas tally, but they don't

7:20

correlate with anything. They're not

7:22

predictive. So, we're just going to have

7:25

to wait and see with the monthly

7:28

employment situation reports, with

7:30

weekly initial jobless claims and

7:32

continuing unemployment claims to know

7:35

if the no firing

7:39

condition is still holding. For now,

7:43

it's my best guess that it is and we

7:46

may, if it goes away, but no hiring also

7:50

goes away, we may remain in a tolerable

7:53

equilibrium

7:55

where

7:56

the labor force is is okay and labor

7:59

growth is okay.

8:01

Doug Pede, good to have you, sir. Thanks

8:03

for joining us today.

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