titleChatham House: The Hormuz Inflation Shock Is Only Just Beginning
sourceChatham House
authorMichael Klein (Senior Research Fellow, Global Economy and Finance Programme)
date2026-05-14

Key Claims

  1. Energy prices are a central variable in shaping overall inflation
  2. US CPI rose 0.6% in April, 3.8% YoY — highest since May 2023
  3. Philippines inflation hit 7.2% (from 4.1% in March); Turkey 32.4% (from 30.9%)
  4. Brent crude at ~$100 vs $69 average in 2025 — enough to keep inflation fears ignited
  5. No previous episode of accelerating global inflation without rising energy prices at heart
  6. Central bankers face 'very unpleasant challenges' — rate hikes can't make oil price go down
  7. Second-round effects: energy price increases feed through into broader inflation processes
  8. IEA Birol: Hormuz closures and rising summer demand could push oil markets into 'red zone' by July/August

Source: Chatham House — May 14, 2026

Author: Michael Klein (Senior Research Fellow, Global Economy and Finance Programme)

April 2026 Inflation Data

CountryApril 2026 CPI YoYMarch 2026 CPI YoY
United States3.8%
Philippines7.2%4.1%
Turkey32.4%30.9%

Core Argument

Energy as the Inflation Driver

"The price of energy is a central variable in shaping overall inflation. And since the US-Israeli war on Iran and the subsequent closure of the Strait of Hormuz, energy prices have soared and show no signs of returning to pre-war levels."

Historical Pattern

The Demand Question

Chatham House addresses the counter-argument that demand conditions (not supply) determine energy prices:

Second-Round Effects

Central bankers' main concern:

IEA "Red Zone" Warning

Speaking at Chatham House, Dr Fatih Birol (IEA Executive Director) warned:

Significance

Chatham House provides the macro-inflation framework that complements the supply-side analysis from banks and oil companies. The key insight: the inflation shock is "only just beginning" — April data is just the first wave.

The central banker bind is crucial: they can't fix supply-side inflation with rate hikes, but they must prevent second-round effects. This creates a policy dilemma that could amplify the economic damage of the Hormuz crisis.

The Birol "red zone" warning (July/August) aligns with JPMorgan's operational stress timeline (June) and Morgan Stanley's buffer exhaustion window (late June/July).

Chatham-House-Hormuz-Inflation-Shock-Jun-2026.md