Takeaways by Axi Select
- The oil market is now dictating the global rate path, with central banks reacting rather than leading as energy driven inflation pressures reprice the entire curve
- Hawkish expectations for the ECB and BOE are being pulled forward by markets, even without policy action, as traders front run the risk that elevated energy prices delay or cancel easing cycles
- FX is trading as a rates differential story, with currencies moving in line with how aggressively local yield curves reprice to the oil shock rather than domestic economic fundamentals
ECB and BOE Meet a Market Already Written by the Barrel
The market keeps pretending central banks are still holding the pen, but right now it is the barrel that is dictating the script, and rates are simply transcribing the shock in real time while FX trades the translation error.
Yes, Central banks are ringing the inflation alarm, but it’s the barrel pulling the alarm cord.
What began this week as a tentative calm has been overrun by the familiar rhythm of geopolitical escalation feeding straight into the energy complex, then bleeding into the front end before dragging the long end along for the ride. There is nothing subtle about it. It is mechanical. Oil tightens the vise, inflation expectations twitch higher, and the bond market leans back into restriction before any central banker has even opened their mouth.
You saw it in the US first. The tried to sit still, projecting cuts somewhere down the distant road, but the market heard something else entirely. A slight upward nudge in growth expectations and a firmer long run rate was enough to flip the tone from patient to guarded. snapped higher, tens pushed through 4.25 percent, and the entire curve shifted from waiting for relief to questioning whether relief was ever coming on schedule. That is the tell. When the market starts pushing the first cut further into the horizon without a formal policy shift, it means the shock is no longer theoretical. It is being priced as persistent.
Now Europe walks onto that same stage, but the script is already written before Lagarde even steps up to the podium. The market has moved ahead of the central bank and is now asking whether the ECB can catch up to pricing that is already leaning hawkish again. Not because growth is roaring, not because wages are spiralling, but because the energy channel is once again contaminating the inflation outlook. The irony is that the ECB can sound resolute, data dependent, vigilant, but it is no longer leading. It is trying to keep pace with a market that is being dragged by oil rather than guided by policy.
That creates a strange dynamic. The central bank signals optionality, but the market hears conditional tightening. Every barrel that ticks higher reinforces the idea that policy cannot ease, and in that environment even standing still feels like leaning hawkish. The more energy prices dominate, the less room there is for forward guidance to matter. Rates are no longer trading central bank intent. They are trading the probability that energy forces the central bank’s hand.
The UK is the cleaner laboratory for this effect because the market there has already completed a full psychological rotation. It was pricing cuts not long ago and is now flirting with hikes, not because the domestic story has fundamentally changed, but because the external shock has rewritten the inflation trajectory. The Bank of England will not move today, but the vote split becomes the message. It is the closest thing the market has to reading the reaction function in real time. A wider dissent signals that the committee is feeling the same pressure the market is already expressing through yields.
What matters here is not whether there is an immediate policy shift. It is whether the central bank is perceived to be behind the curve that oil is carving out. If the vote split hints at discomfort with inflation persistence, the market leans further into higher for longer. If it stays tightly clustered, the market may hesitate, but only briefly, because as long as energy remains elevated the pressure does not dissipate, it compounds.
Underneath all of this, the usual stress signals are not yet flashing red. Credit spreads are not blowing out, peripheral bond spreads are contained, real yields are not screaming growth panic. That tells you the system has not cracked. But it also tells you something more subtle and more dangerous. The market is repricing rates without fully pricing the growth consequences. It is absorbing the inflation shock while still assuming the real economy can carry the weight.
That is where the fault line sits.
Because if oil continues to dictate the rate path, the tightening is no longer a policy choice; it is an imported condition. Demand does not adjust because a central banker wills it. It adjusts because the price signal forces it. And when that adjustment comes, it rarely announces itself politely. It shows up in weaker consumption, softer risk appetite, and eventually a shift in how the long end trades, not as a reflection of inflation risk, but as a signal of growth fatigue.
For now, though, the market is still in the first act, where inflation fear dominates, and policy is dragged into a more restrictive posture by the energy complex.
As for FX?
At least for today, remember what I said earlier in the week: treat every trade as a window of opportunity. That still holds.
I think we are on the cusp of a more disruptive energy price shock, and in that regime, the dollar should be the natural beneficiary. Higher oil feeds directly into tighter financial conditions, pushes up rate expectations, and delays the easing cycle.
It is also a simple case of haves and have-nots. Who exports energy and who imports it. The sits on the right side of that equation.
That is a classic dollar positive setup.
But is no longer a clean expression of that view.
The yen has held up better in Asia, anchored by the BoJ’s latest policy signals and reinforced by increasingly firm verbal intervention from Japanese officials. Finance Minister Katayama made it clear they are prepared to respond at any time and are operating with a high sense of urgency around FX moves. That messaging matters at these levels.
So that pushes me back toward .
The market has gone all in on the hawkish side. A 55bp repricing in one-year ECB expectations through March has stretched the front end to the point where even a whisper can move it. But that stretch cuts both ways. To justify current pricing, the ECB would need to deliver forward guidance that seems unlikely at this stage.
That leaves the euro leaning with a downside bias, but the usual rate differential channel is no longer doing the heavy lifting. FX has lost its sensitivity to rates as oil has stepped in as the dominant driver. The euro barely caught a bid on the hawkish repricing, so it is unlikely to take a full hit on any dovish recalibration either.
Still, in the near term, we could see EUR/USD trading sub 1.140 before the end of the week if the dollar signal starts to align with oil as the true north star.




















































