Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent disagrees with the oil industry. In his eyes, recent energy-driven inflation and elevated crude prices are temporary distortions that will soon reverse. Some may even dare to say, transitory.
Yet Chevron Corp. (NYSE:CVX) CEO Mike Wirth has been vocal about how shrinking inventories and damaged energy infrastructure are creating conditions for a longer-lasting supply crunch.
Avoiding The Doomer View
Bessent has rejected pessimism, pointing to a series of strong macroeconomic indicators. Speaking during a White House briefing reported by the New York Post, he highlighted all-time highs in stock indices, resilient consumer spending, and real GDP growth of 2.6% over the past four quarters.
He also argued that the recent decline in the personal savings rate should not automatically be interpreted as financial stress.
“Academic literature would tell you a lower savings rate can mean one of two things: the kind of doomer view that you took, or that people have more confidence,” Bessent said.
He noted that average 401(k) balances have risen by roughly $30,000 since President Donald Trump returned to office, suggesting households feel more comfortable spending rather than accumulating cash savings.
The Treasury secretary’s broader inflation argument rests on the belief that current price pressures are overwhelmingly tied to energy markets. Despite April’s 3.8% year-over-year CPI reading and a sharp rise in gasoline costs earlier this year, Bessent maintains that the inflation spike is not becoming entrenched.
“I firmly believe that nothing is more transient than a supply shock,” Bessent told CNBC.
His confidence rests on the belief that oil flows through the region will normalize once the conflict ends.
“We are more resilient to energy price fluctuations due to President Trump’s energy dominance and deregulatory agenda.” He has gone even further, publicly predicting that “oil will be lower than pre-conflict levels when this ends.”
The Insiders’ Take
Wirth, however, sees a far more fragile physical market beneath the reassuring macroeconomic data. Speaking at a Bernstein conference, the Chevron CEO warned that crude inventories are steadily shrinking and that the market’s traditional shock absorbers are disappearing.
“The buffers and the shock absorbers are being steadily drawn down, and the ability for the market to absorb this imbalance is drastically diminished today versus where we started,” Wirth said, according to the Financial Times.
“Over the next few weeks, we’re likely to see those pressures flow through more directly to physical prices, and there’s more upwards pressure that I would expect as we get into June and certainly into July.”
If elevated physical pressures push crude prices too high over June and July, the energy crisis risks tipping the global economy into recession, he added.
The ongoing disruption around the Strait of Hormuz has removed an estimated 12 million to 13 million barrels of oil per day from global markets. According to Wirth, the market initially absorbed the shock because inventories were unusually high before the conflict and because governments released strategic reserves. Those temporary relief mechanisms are now fading.
Meanwhile, ADNOC chief executive Sultan al-Jaber warned that restoring Middle Eastern energy infrastructure is unlikely to happen quickly, even if the conflict gets resolved.
“It will take at least four months to get back to 80 percent of pre-conflict flows, and full flows will not return before the first or even second quarter of 2027,” he said during an Atlantic Council event on May 21.
Image via Shutterstock
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