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Fed pivots hawkish as AI capex masks inflation

Thursday, May 14, 2026 · from 3 podcasts, 4 episodes
  • AI-driven capital spending fuels a recursive wealth effect, masking weak real income growth.
  • Producer prices spiked 1.7% as oil inventories hit multi-decade lows, cementing a structural floor.
  • The Fed lost its easing bias because nothing in the economy has broken.

The Federal Reserve’s willingness to cut rates evaporated. Inflation remains above target while the stock market sits at record highs. Neil Dutta on Forward Guidance argues the central bank has no incentive to ease until something in the economy actually breaks.

The threshold for a policy shift rose. Dutta expects the Fed’s “additional adjustments” language - historically a code for cuts - to disappear by summer.

"The Fed is pushing towards a hawkish stance because the labor market is stable, inflation remains above target, and equity markets are at highs."

- Neil Dutta, Forward Guidance

Producer Price Index data printed at 1.7% this week, nearly triple the economist forecast of 0.5%. David Bennett on Bitcoin And notes this spike, driven by supply chain friction in the Strait of Hormuz, immediately pressured Bitcoin’s price. It signals coming consumer inflation.

Global oil reserves are dangerously low. Quinn Thompson argues that even if Middle East trade routes reopen, sovereign nations must soon undertake a massive, price-insensitive restocking effort. This will create a permanent price floor. The U.S. Strategic Petroleum Reserve sits at multi-decade lows, removing any cushion.

The administration faces a choice before the midterms: let reserves hit zero or accept parabolic price increases at the pump.

AI capital expenditure props up the entire structure. Dutta calls this the largest capex boom in decades, surpassing the late 1990s. It acts as a financial accelerator. AI spending fuels corporate earnings, which drive stock prices, which then juice consumer spending via a wealth effect.

This loop masks underlying weakness. Real disposable income growth is anemic. Households treat equity gains as income substitution. A slowdown in data center buildouts would trigger a macro crisis.

Kevin Warsh, newly confirmed to the Fed board, faces a contradiction. Bennett notes Warsh views Bitcoin as a monetary credibility signal but is also an inflation hawk. Warsh may attempt to justify cuts using a “Golden Age” productivity thesis tied to AI.

Dutta thinks the data doesn’t support it. In the 1990s, software and chip prices deflated rapidly. Today, the price of compute, memory, and software is rising. A true productivity boom raises living standards, but current real income growth is flat or negative.

"Without the deflationary tailwinds of the 90s, the productivity argument is a forecast, not a reality."

- Neil Dutta, Forward Guidance

The Fed is trapped. Fiscal deficits run at 6% of GDP, and the central bank injects $500 billion a year through stealth QE. Quinn Thompson argues this makes a nominal recession impossible. The cost is structural inflation. Inflation-protected treasuries and five-year inflation swaps are breaking out to multi-year highs, signaling a new regime.

Investors are rotating into hard assets. Gold sees renewed bids from central banks like China. The only protection is owning what the government is trying to inflate away.

Source Intelligence

- Deep dive into what was said in the episodes

CLARITY Under Attack | Bitcoin NewsMay 13

  • The Senate confirmed Bitcoin-friendly Kevin Warsh to the Federal Reserve Board in a 51-45 vote, with Senator John Fetterman joining Republicans, clearing his path to potentially replace Chair Jerome Powell.
  • The Producer Price Index (PPI) printed at 1.7%, nearly three times higher than the 0.5% economists expected, signaling coming consumer inflation and pressuring Bitcoin's price lower.
Also from this episode: (11)

Protocol (7)

  • Kevin Warsh has described Bitcoin as an important asset and a monetary policy signal, holds an equity stake in Lightning payment startup FlashNet, and maintains advisory ties to Bitwise and stablecoin project Basis.
  • Square has automatically enabled Bitcoin payments via Lightning for roughly 1 million eligible U.S. merchants, with merchants receiving dollar settlements by default to remove currency risk.
  • Charles Schwab launched spot Bitcoin trading for retail clients with a 75 basis point fee, integrating it directly into brokerage accounts that hold over $11 trillion in client assets.
  • Franklin Templeton and Kraken parent Payward partnered to tokenize traditional financial products like money market funds, aiming to make them usable as on-chain collateral or cash management tools.
  • David Bennett argues Bitcoin price action now correlates more strongly with traditional economic news like CPI and PPI due to increased ownership by mainstream finance, a shift from its first decade.
  • Kyle Olney argues the Blockchain Regulatory Certainty Act (BRCA), Section 604, is the existential provision of crypto market structure legislation, as it protects non-custodial software developers from being prosecuted as money transmitters.
  • Olney warns that without BRCA protections, developers like those behind Tornado Cash and Samourai Wallet face criminal prosecution for publishing code, which would drive innovation offshore to jurisdictions like Singapore or the UAE.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Anthropic and OpenAI explicitly warned that tokenized versions of their company stock sold without board approval are void and carry no economic value or shareholder rights.

Corruption (1)

  • The Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) is lobbying against BRCA Section 604, arguing it would enable money laundering, aligning with banking lobby opposition to other parts of the Clarity Act.

Regulation (2)

  • CFTC Chairman Mike Selig filed amicus briefs backing prediction market Kalshi against Ohio and other states, asserting the CFTC's exclusive jurisdiction over event contracts traded on designated contract markets.
  • The CFTC has sued five states - Wisconsin, New York, Arizona, Connecticut, and Illinois - for interfering with CFTC-regulated prediction markets like Kalshi, Polymarket, and Coinbase.

The Fed Is Losing Its Easing Bias While AI Props Up The Economy | Neil DuttaMay 13

  • Neil Dutta argues the Fed is pushing towards a hawkish stance because the labor market is stable, inflation remains above target, and equity markets are at highs, leaving little trade-off to focus on anything but inflation.
  • The current AI-driven capex boom is the largest in their careers, surpassing the late 1990s. Dutta warns its eventual slowdown will be a major macro issue, threatening equity appreciation and consumer spending.
  • Dutta states real consumer spending over the last two quarters is running below 2%.
  • Aggregate weekly payrolls, a measure of jobs, hours, and earnings, has been negative over the last three months, indicating household balance sheets are under pressure.
  • Wage growth remains sluggish at around 3.5%, as measured by average hourly earnings and the Employment Cost Index, which Dutta sees as evidence labor market conditions are not tight.
  • Dutta questions the 'golden age' productivity thesis because prices for key tech inputs like chips and compute are rising, unlike the deflationary 1990s, and real income growth is weak.
  • Dutta expects the Fed to soon remove its 'additional adjustments' easing bias language from statements, given current economic conditions, though an actual rate hike is less certain.
  • Manufacturing production is only up about 0.5% over the past year, leading Dutta to be skeptical of a significant industrial renaissance despite positive PMI readings.
Also from this episode: (2)

Energy (1)

  • Geopolitical energy shocks, U.S. energy exports, and tariffs are seen as key drivers of current inflation, creating a tension between the Fed's mandate and White House policy.

Labor (1)

  • Non-residential construction, including data centers and heavy engineering, is a major driver of recent employment growth, offsetting earlier reliance solely on healthcare.

Oil And AI Are Breaking The Middle Class | Weekly RoundupMay 9

  • Quinn argues the market underprices the global restocking effort for oil, as sovereigns will seek to replenish strategic reserves and add a security premium, making longer-dated futures and strategies like selling long-dated puts attractive.
  • Tyler notes implied volatility for USO is at the 96th percentile, creating expensive insurance; he prefers selling options to monetize high volatility rather than taking a directional view on geopolitics.
  • Macro data shows a K-shaped economic split: top income households modestly reduced gasoline consumption but increased spending, while lower income groups saw drastic consumption cuts with little spending increase, masking broader demand destruction.
  • A host forecasts headline CPI will print in the 4% range by year-end, yet the Fed is unlikely to hike despite inflation, running $500 billion in annual QE and a 5.5-6% fiscal deficit, making a nominal GDP recession impossible.
  • Blended year-over-year EPS growth for Q1 is 27%, the strongest since Q4 2021, driven by broad-based rerating beyond AI, with mid-cap and small-cap earnings also accelerating, signaling a hot economy.
  • Tyler highlights extreme market concentration risks, noting Nasdaq price-to-free-cash-flow exceeds PE due to high CapEx, and surging S&P call volume indicates a gamma-driven market vulnerable to a sharp reversal.
  • The hosts link centralization and broken money to societal decay, citing declining US male life expectancy, a microplastics crisis, and degraded food quality as symptoms of a system where true costs are obfuscated.
Also from this episode: (6)

Energy (1)

  • Quinn warns that even if the Strait of Hormuz opens immediately, operational delays and declining US reserves will force acute political pressure on the Trump administration within weeks to avert demand destruction or a parabolic spike in oil prices.

Politics (2)

  • A host posits that prolonged US geopolitical strategy aims to keep oil prices elevated to empower US energy exports and weaken China, which relies on Hormuz for over 10% of its oil, while simultaneously racing to secure nuclear and AI dominance.
  • A host asserts current policy is unsustainable, citing midterm elections in November and soaring gas prices destroying bottom-decile earners, while elites remain disconnected; equal-weight S&P 500 has not made new highs, unlike cap-weighted indices.

War (1)

  • The hosts argue an end to the Iran conflict could be bearish for bonds, as it would ease commodity supply fears and boost growth, while continued conflict risks $150-$200 oil; in either scenario, yields are likely to rise.

Markets (1)

  • The hosts see gold as a prime asset in an environment of rising inflation and a sidelined Fed, further boosted by renewed Chinese buying, midterm election uncertainty, and global intervention risks.

AI & Tech (1)

  • Labor market data shows a crash in professional and business services job openings, multi-year lows, while demand for software engineers rises, signaling AI disruption of 'bullshit jobs' and a shift toward skilled technical roles.

Lloyd Blankfein on Risk, Crisis, and LeadershipMay 12

  • Technology adoption in finance was winner-take-all; milliseconds mattered for execution systems, forcing Goldman to run dual legacy and new systems to avoid regulatory mistakes.
Also from this episode: (17)

Business (9)

  • Lloyd Blankfein describes managing a financial institution as balancing two conflicting impulses: taking risk to make money and practicing risk management to protect assets.
  • Blankfein argues effective crisis leadership depends less on predicting the future than on robust contingency planning and decisiveness when information is scarce.
  • Blankfein believes crisis performance is unpredictable; he cites an athletic 'man's man' who failed during the financial crisis and a seemingly frail person who excelled.
  • He advises selecting board members based on proven crisis experience, not on appearances or perceived resilience.
  • Goldman Sachs was built brick by brick through internal entrepreneurial growth, with J. Aron's acquisition being a notable exception that accidentally imported a street-level trading culture.
  • Blankfein entered Goldman via J. Aron, hired as a precious metals salesman after being rejected by other firms; J. Aron's culture was street-level and mafia-like, promoting drivers to traders.
  • Goldman's partnership culture fostered ownership mentality, requiring leaders to socialize decisions and prioritize firm-wide performance over siloed success.
  • The firm's alumni office maintains strong ties with former employees, fostering lasting loyalty and a network that defines many careers decades later.
  • Goldman went public to grow its balance sheet after Glass-Steagall repeal but consciously preserved its partnership culture for 25 years post-IPO.

Culture (4)

  • Blankfein's personal risk calculus led him to leave Twitter; he saw social media engagement as high risk with little reward beyond ego.
  • His calm response to an active shooter event at the White House Correspondents Dinner stemmed from viewing it dispassionately, like watching a movie.
  • Blankfein grew up in NYCHA public housing where the income cap was $90 per week, giving him an advantage of low expectations and no burden of high ambition.
  • His early ambition was simply to attend an out-of-town college to escape Brooklyn; Harvard was a major culture shock.

Psychology (1)

  • He emphasizes the critical distinction in management between punishing stupidity and punishing being wrong, noting smart people are often wrong.

AI & Tech (2)

  • The firm's SECDB risk management system, over 25 years old, remains a core platform due to its flexible and durable design.
  • Blankfein views AI with excitement and apprehension, noting its leverage creates systemic risks where a software error can cause billions in losses.

Markets (1)

  • Blankfein credits Goldman's survival during the financial crisis to rigorous mark-to-market risk management, not consumer business absence.