The escalating tensions in the Middle East have intensified inflation concerns among US consumers.
While President Trump characterizes the economy as the strongest in history with no inflation, this position stands at odds with the latest data.
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What the March Data Shows
The Kobeissi Letter highlighted that US consumer inflation expectations surged in March, jumping 0.7 percentage points to 6.2%. This marked the highest reading since August 2025 and the steepest rise since April 2025.
US Inflation Expectations. Source: X/The Kobeissi LetterUniversity of Michigan data reinforced the trend. Its 1-year inflation expectations gauge rose 0.4 percentage points to 3.8%, also the largest monthly increase since April 2025.
Interest rate fears followed close behind. The share of consumers expecting higher rates over the next 12 months climbed 7.5 percentage points to 42.4%.
This suggests price anxiety is filtering through to broader financial expectations, not just grocery bills.
Surging Oil Prices Threaten US Inflation Spike
Oil prices are amplifying the pressure. With US crude trading above $100 per barrel, models from The Kobeissi Letter project that US Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation could reach approximately 3.3% if prices hold at current levels for two more months.
The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has also revised its US headline inflation forecast up by 1.2 percentage points to 4.2% for 2026.
With oil markets disrupted and consumer expectations now at multi-month highs, the gap between political messaging and lived economic experience appears to be widening.
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Source: https://beincrypto.com/us-inflation-expectations-march-middle-east-conflict/






