JPMorgan CEO Dimon Warns: A Possible Iran War Could Reignite the Inflation Pressure, and the Federal Reserve’s Interest Rates May Stay High for Longer

JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warned in his annual shareholder letter that the Iran war could trigger “persistent oil and commodity price shocks, along with a reshaping of global supply chains,” potentially making inflation stickier than the market’s current expectations and ultimately forcing the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates at a higher level for longer.

Dimon described inflation as this year’s “potential destroyer of the economy” (skunk at the party).

Multi-layered impact of the war on the economy

Dimon said the impact of the Iran war on the economy is multi-layered. A surge in oil prices would directly push up gasoline prices and manufacturing costs, but the deeper risk lies in a restructuring of global supply chains. The United States has officially ordered the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz—a chokepoint that carries about 20% of global oil shipments—which is the “commodity price shock” that Dimon warned about.

The Federal Reserve’s dilemma

If inflation flares up again due to the war, the Federal Reserve will face a dilemma: keep interest rates high to curb inflation, but risk suppressing economic growth; or cut rates to support the economy, but potentially allow inflation to run out of control. Dimon’s view leans toward the former—interest rates may remain at higher levels for longer than the market expects.

This comes on top of the impact of Trump’s threat to impose a 50% tariff on China—tariffs themselves are an inflation driver, and combined with a surge in energy prices, the dual inflation pressures will make the Fed’s rate-cut timetable even harder to predict.

Implications for the crypto market

Keeping rates elevated is a double-edged sword for the crypto market. In the short term, a high-rate environment reduces the appeal of risk assets because risk-free returns (such as U.S. Treasuries) are more competitive. But in the medium to long term, stronger inflation pressures strengthen the narrative of Bitcoin as an “inflation-hedge asset”—and this is one of the reasons Strategy is choosing to add to its Bitcoin position right now.

Even so, Dimon remains positive about the overall U.S. economy, saying, “The U.S. economy still has resilience; consumers are still earning and spending; and businesses are still healthy.” However, he warned that this resilience could be weakened by the economic shocks brought on by the war.

This article JPMorgan Chase CEO Dimon warns: The Iran war may reignite inflation, and Fed rates could stay high for longer was first published on Chain News ABMedia.

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