War in the Middle East, oil, and jobs
6 min
•Apr 13, 20266 days agoSummary
The episode examines how the Middle East conflict is reshaping the U.S. economy, with a U.S. blockade of Iranian ports threatening to further restrict global oil supplies and spike prices. While energy and defense sectors are poised for job growth, broader economic impacts including inflation and higher logistics costs are expected to dampen hiring across most industries.
Insights
- Oil supply disruptions from multiple chokepoints (Strait of Hormuz, Bab El-Mendab) create compounding risk; even if conflict ends immediately, production shutdowns take weeks to reverse, extending economic damage
- War creates sector-specific winners (energy, defense) and losers (logistics, transportation); overall employment growth will likely stall as inflation erodes wage gains and businesses adopt cautious hiring postures
- Banking sector health serves as economic bellwether; Q1 earnings will reveal whether mergers are delayed, private credit is expanding, and consumers are reducing spending due to energy price shocks
- Energy sector labor shortage reversal depends on sustained high oil prices; Permian Basin and Gulf of Mexico projects are economically viable at current prices but require significant workforce ramp-up
- Inflation spike in March (3.3% year-over-year) negates job market gains from earlier in the month, signaling consumer wallet squeeze and likely business pullback on hiring in April and beyond
Trends
Energy sector labor force expansion after decade-long decline due to high oil prices and viable project economicsDefense contractor hiring acceleration tied to proposed 40%+ budget increase for defense spendingPrivate credit market growth as alternative financing channel; banks increasingly fund private credit fundsLogistics and transportation sector contraction driven by fuel cost inflationCautious business hiring stance emerging despite strong March jobs report; companies 'hunkering down' rather than laying offGeopolitical risk premium on oil prices creating supply chain vulnerability across multiple global chokepointsAI security concerns in banking sector gaining investor attention alongside traditional earnings metricsConsumer spending containment expected as inflation erodes wage purchasing powerExtended production shutdown cycles in energy sector creating long-term supply constraintsMerger and acquisition activity likely to slow due to geopolitical uncertainty
Topics
Iranian Port Blockade and U.S. SanctionsStrait of Hormuz Oil Supply DisruptionBab El-Mendab Strait Closure RiskGlobal Oil Price VolatilityEnergy Sector Labor Force GrowthPermian Basin Shale Oil ProductionDefense Spending Budget IncreaseDefense Contractor HiringBank Earnings and Economic HealthPrivate Credit Market ExpansionInflation Impact on Consumer SpendingLogistics and Transportation Cost InflationUPS Fuel Cost PressuresWage Gains vs. Inflation ErosionBusiness Hiring Slowdown Forecast
Companies
Goldman Sachs
Reported Q1 net earnings exceeding $5 billion; first major bank to report results this earnings season
JPMorgan Chase
Scheduled to report Q1 profits this week; investor focus on war impact and private credit exposure
Wells Fargo
Scheduled to report Q1 profits this week; part of major bank earnings parade
Bank of America
Scheduled to report Q1 profits this week; investor scrutiny on economic health indicators
UPS
Experiencing negative impact from increased fuel costs affecting logistics operations and job growth
People
Julia Coronado
Analyzed oil supply restrictions and production shutdown impacts from broader blockade strategy
Tom Closa
Discussed labor force ramp-up in Permian Basin and Gulf of Mexico due to viable project economics
Jerry McGinn
Analyzed defense contractor hiring growth from proposed 40% defense budget increase
Michael Gritten
Reported negative impacts of fuel costs on UPS, trucking, logistics, and barge traffic in Louisville
Brian Bethune
Forecasted business hiring slowdown in April and consumer spending containment from inflation
Subri Ben-Ashor
Hosted the Marketplace Morning Report episode
Nancy Marshall-Genzer
Reported on bank earnings and investor focus on war impacts and private credit
Mitchell Hartman
Reported on war's impact on jobs, energy sector growth, and business hiring outlook
Quotes
"The critical issue is that, yes, now it's a broader blockade, and that means the oil supply is even more restricted than it was before."
Julia Coronado•Early in episode
"Even if all of this were to end tomorrow, we're already looking at a pretty extended disruption, even in the best case scenario."
Julia Coronado•Mid-episode
"When you're drilling for shale oil in the Permian Basin, it's very labor intensive. The workforce has actually been declining for more than a decade."
Tom Closa•Mid-episode
"Businesses will throttle back on their hiring. With the surge in prices in March, inflation is now cancelling out all the wage gains workers are getting."
Brian Bethune•Late episode
"Hunkering down, maybe not laying workers off, but not hiring either."
Brian Bethune•Late episode
Full Transcript