Analysis-An oil shock is coming, but the U.S. may have already paid for
it
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[March 10, 2022] By
Howard Schneider
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The gusher of money
the U.S. government poured into family bank accounts during the
coronavirus pandemic, credited with speeding the rebound from the health
crisis, may now help limit the economic damage from Russia's invasion of
Ukraine.
As analysts have begun parsing what sky-high oil prices and new
uncertainty might mean, a common theme has emerged: U.S. consumers may
get gouged at the gas pump but will likely be able to maintain much of
their expected spending on other goods and services because of the
savings accumulated during the last two years thanks to emergency
federal programs totaling about $5 trillion since the spring of 2020.
The war in Ukraine is a shock, they note, but one the United States may
have unintentionally insured itself against.
"Household savings could help consumers maintain spending volumes in the
face of related price increases," JPMorgan economist Daniel Silver wrote
this week, noting that each 10% increase in oil prices would cost
consumers an additional $23 billion each year.
Households "have accumulated about $2.6 trillion of 'excess saving' in
recent years relative to the pre-pandemic trend, which all else equal
could be enough to cover even a sustained 50% surge in oil and natural
gas prices for many years to come."
U.S. consumer price data due to be released later on Thursday is
expected to show the pace of annual price increases jumped to 7.9% last
month from 7.5% in January. Even that won't reflect the brunt of
commodity price increases in the two weeks since Russia invaded its
neighbor.
The full effect will depend on how long the war lasts, how deeply
commodity markets are disrupted, and how forcefully the Federal Reserve
responds to inflation that was accelerating for reasons beyond oil
prices.
The United States and its Western allies responded to the Feb. 24
invasion by imposing punishing sanctions on Russia, the world's largest
exporter of oil and oil products combined, adding to the updraft in oil
prices. The price of U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude briefly
hit $130 a barrel, from around $92 before the conflict, and ended at
around $110 on Wednesday.
The average U.S. price for regular unleaded gasoline has hit a record
$4.25 a gallon, though that is about $1 a gallon below the
inflation-adjusted peak.
While that indicates inflation likely has further to climb, it's less
clear what it will mean both for the Fed, as it debates how fast to
raise interest rates, and for the U.S. economy as it emerges from the
pandemic.
Some prior oil shocks, such as the one in the 1970s, were associated
with more persistent inflation that prompted the U.S. central bank to
react with aggressive rate increases. Others, such as the brief spike
during the Gulf War in the early 1990s, came alongside Fed rate cuts
because underlying inflation was expected to ease.
SIGNS OF SUBSTITUTION, NOT PULLBACK
The U.S. economy may have some room to give. Growth entering the year
was strong, and even if high oil prices slow things, the outcome for the
year is still likely to be solid - not the weak growth and rising prices
of a true "stagflation."
"The U.S. has become less sensitive to energy shocks," with a steady
decline in the share of income spent on energy, Bank of America
economists wrote in a note. "With Omicron cases fading, the reopening of
the service sector has resumed ... Excess savings built up over the last
two years can fund this rebound."
GRAPHIC: Energy's share of U.S. consumer spending-
https://graphics.reuters.com/UKRAINE-CRISIS/USA-CONSUMPTION/jnvwebrqwvw/
chart.png
Research on past oil shocks offers a sense of what to expect. Even as
gas prices rise, fuel consumption and driving tend to remain steady,
partly out of necessity - the daily commute, driving on the job, or
family chores - as well as choice.
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A person uses a petrol pump at a gas station as fuel prices surged
in Manhattan, New York City, U.S., March 7, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew
Kelly/
Household budgets then adapt. One 2008 study of periods when gas prices were
high found increased bargain shopping at grocery stores and substitution into
cheaper brands.
One possible bellwether of such a move: Shares of discount retail chain Dollar
General Corp have risen about 10% since the Ukraine war began, outpacing the
broader market.
Nik Modi, a tobacco and household products analyst at RBC Capital Markets, said
there was already evidence in late February before the invasion that smokers
were trading down to cheaper cigarettes, a trend he expects to continue as gas
prices rise. Pump prices had risen nearly 30 cents a gallon from the start of
the year to when Russia invaded. They're up another 70 cents since.
Yet high frequency restaurant and travel data so far shows little evidence of
consumers pulling back.
PANDEMIC BEHAVIOR CHANGES
Corporate officials who might otherwise expect fallout from higher gas prices
said they were hopeful consumer spending will hold up.
Some studies have found rising gas prices cause families to at least delay
larger purchases, but "the effect of that might be somewhat more muted in this
environment than maybe it has historically," David Denton, the chief financial
officer of home improvement chain Lowe's Cos Inc's, said at the UBS Global
Consumer and Retail conference on Wednesday.
"In the past, when gas prices have gone up, demand in this sector has kind of
gone down a little bit," Denton said, but working from home in particular may
have insulated consumers who previously commuted to work.
Other pandemic dynamics may also play out. Public transit use remains depressed
but could be an acceptable option for former riders as COVID-19 infections
decrease. Credit card balances are lower, giving financial space to consumers
intent on spending now that social life has resumed more fully.
In addition, economists and officials have noted that higher oil prices now have
some potential upside in the United States, with the hit to consumers offset by
rising employment and investment in domestic energy production.
"Oil prices would need to rise much further from here to seriously threaten the
consumer recovery," wrote Michael Pearce, a senior U.S. economist for Capital
Economics. "For the broader economy, any hit to consumption should be mostly
offset by greater investment in shale production."
Pearce said there may even be some unintended benefits for the Fed. If rising
gas prices do curb consumer demand for some goods and services, it could ease
inflation by bringing demand closer in line with available supply.
Rate hikes in part work by discouraging consumption, and the oil shock may
accomplish some of that job for the Fed, which is widely expected to raise
borrowing costs at the end of its policy meeting next week.
"To the extent this means domestic demand is weaker, we should be seeing less
upward pressure on wages and services prices," Pearce said.
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Siddharth Cavale in
Bangalore; and Jessica DiNapoli in New York; Editing by Dan Burns and Paul Simao)
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