Fed Chair Powell Warns: Another Supply Shock Is Coming

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By Joel South Published

Quick Read

  • SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) has fallen 7% year to date through March 30, 2026, with the VIX climbing to 30.61 as an energy shock driven by WTI crude oil surging above $100 per barrel threatens to reignite inflation. Core PCE inflation reached 128.394 in January 2026, its highest 12-month reading, while the 10-year Treasury yield jumped from 3.97% in late February to 4.44%, compressing valuations on the technology-heavy fund.

  • Fed Chair Jerome Powell warned of an incoming energy shock that could push inflation away from the 2% target, leaving the Fed on hold at a 3.75% fed funds rate while energy prices and market volatility signal growing stagflation concerns.

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Fed Chair Powell Warns: Another Supply Shock Is Coming

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Jerome Powell delivered a pointed warning that markets cannot afford to ignore: “Now we have another supply shock coming.” The Fed Chair laid out a sequence that should sharpen every investor’s attention heading into the second quarter of 2026.

Powell’s framing is precise. Inflation came down sharply in 2023 and 2024, getting close to the Fed’s 2% target by end of 2024. Then came the tariff shock, which turned out smaller than feared. Other countries did not fully retaliate, and what was implemented was less than what had been announced, meaning the tariff impact was “largely fallen here in the US and not abroad.” With inflation running around 3%, and somewhere between 0.5 and 0.8 percentage points attributable to tariffs, the US had been “pretty close to 2% all this time.”

Now Powell sees a third shock forming: an energy shock. The data backs the concern. WTI crude oil is now above $100 for multiple days and that is the early signature of an energy-driven inflation episode.

What This Means for SPY Investors

SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY | SPY Price Prediction) is already absorbing the pressure. SPY is down -7% year to date through March 30, 2026, and off -8% over the past month. The VIX tells the same story: the fear gauge sits at 30.61, up 54% over the past month, and at the 95.7th percentile of the past 12 months.

The bond market is pricing in persistence. The 10-year Treasury yield has climbed from 3.97% in late February to 4.44% as of March 27, 2026 a sharp move that compresses valuations on the growth-heavy names dominating SPY. Information Technology alone represents 32% of SPY’s weight, making the fund acutely sensitive to rate-driven multiple compression.

Core PCE, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, reached 128.394 in January 2026 its highest reading in the 12-month dataset. Consumer confidence offers no cushion: the University of Michigan sentiment index registered 56.6 in February 2026, deep in pessimistic territory.

Powell’s posture remains deliberate. “We do think our policy is in a good place for us to wait and see,” he said, with the fed funds rate held steady at 3.75% since December 2025. But waiting and seeing only works if the energy shock stays manageable. Powell himself acknowledged: “No one knows how big it will be — it’s way too early to know.” That uncertainty is exactly what the VIX is reflecting. Investors holding broad index exposure should watch oil prices and core PCE closely over the next two months.

Photo of Joel South
About the Author Joel South →

Joel South covers large-cap stocks, dividend investing, and major market trends, with a focus on earnings analysis, valuation, and turning complex data into actionable insights for investors.

He brings more than 15 years of experience as an investor and financial journalist, including 12 years at The Motley Fool, where he served as an investment analyst, Bureau Chief, and later led the Fool.com investing news desk. He has also co-hosted an investing podcast and appeared across TV and radio discussing market trends.

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