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The Big Story 2026-06-07 10:29 · 5 min read

Big Story — When Energy Inflation Splits the Map, Rate Policy Cuts Against Its Own Cure

When Energy Inflation Splits the Map, Rate Policy Cuts Against Its Own Cure

When Energy Inflation Splits the Map, Rate Policy Cuts Against Its Own Cure Somewhere on the California grid on Friday afternoon, a megawatt-hour of electricity changed hands for less than the price of a sandwich. CAISO SP15 settled at $1.74. Two hundred miles inland, Palo Verde cleared $7.50 and Mid-Columbia $16.41 as the whole Western Interconnect sagged toward its floor. On the other side of the continent, the same afternoon, PJM Western Hub printed $61.48, MISO Indiana Hub $59.50 and ISO-NE Mass Hub $52.29. One country, one currency, one timestamp, and better than a thirty-fold gap in the price of an identical electron. The inflation models being finalised ahead of Wednesday's CPI release treat American power as a single rising line — elevated energy keeps core sticky, the Fed holds, higher for longer. That framing needs the energy impulse to be national. Friday's tape describes something narrower: a constrained, grid-bound East paying sixty dollars while a solar-flooded West gives midday power away. Energy's contribution to sticky prices is real, but it lives in regional grids and capital goods, and the West is structurally deflationary on power for the same reason the East is not — wires and sunshine, not the macro cycle. This is not a uniquely American quirk. The same split showed up in Australia on Friday, where solar-rich South Australia spot fell 25.2% to $104.58 while grid-constrained New South Wales jumped 31.8% to $117.16 and Queensland rose 37.0% to $110.73. Where renewables can flood a node, midday power collapses; where transmission bottlenecks trap load behind thermal generation, prices climb. A national — or in Europe's case, continental — energy inflation print is being written on top of grids that are pulling violently apart at the nodal level. The correlation traders are pricing into CPI is an artefact of geography and copper in the ground, not a clean macro variable a central bank can lean on. A near-zero midday print is not cheap energy in any sense a hedger recognises. SP15 at $1.74 is the duck curve widening — the same California grid that gives noon solar away pays up for peaker gas at seven in the evening, when the sun drops and load holds. Henry Hub at $3.23 is the fuel that fills that evening hole, and the cost of being short the 7pm peak rises even as the daily average falls. A utility hedging California load does not pay the mean; it pays the dispersion. Intraday spread is what feeds the risk premium, and the risk premium — not the average level — propagates into forward power curves and, eventually, into the inflation expectations that hedging stacks embed. "Higher for longer," quoted as an average, hides the cost that is actually growing. The relief for the expensive Eastern hubs is more generation and more transmission, and both now depend on capital that has become more expensive on two fronts at once. Our read on the week — the One Big Beautiful Bill dismantling the IRA's solar and wind credits ahead of their 2027 phase-out — strips the federal subsidy that lowered the levelised cost of new supply. The failed Fervo geothermal headline points at the second constraint: Western transmission is full, and new zero-marginal-cost generation that cannot reach load does nothing for the hubs that need it. Stack rising, near-inelastic demand — AI data centres, electrification, reshored factories — on a buildout that has lost its subsidy and cannot move power across congested wires, and the marginal cost of new supply climbs precisely when the system needs it to fall. A central bank holding rates high to fight this CPI component raises the financing cost of the one thing that ends it. Wednesday's 10-year auction and the CPI print land the same day for a reason worth sitting with: tightening here works against itself. The most durable cost pressure in the AI-energy build is not quoted at a power hub at all. Copper is at record highs, much of it because of how much of the metal a single data centre swallows — busbars, cabling, the transformers and switchgear that bond a server hall to the grid. A fuel spike clears. A geopolitical premium decays within weeks as cargoes reroute and storage rebuilds. A structural bid for electrical-infrastructure metal does neither. It embeds into capex budgets and grinds through producer prices for years, with transformer lead times already measured in quarters rather than weeks. That is an inflation input with no duck curve to collapse it and no rate cut required to sustain it — the cost compounds inside every new megawatt of capacity the country is trying to add, and it shows up in PPI long before it shows up at a hub. Europe is being sold the same resilience trade from the opposite direction. On Bloomberg Surveillance this week the talk was of unleashing the continent's petroleum and energy companies, of a politics that chastises Scotland for importing North Sea oil from Norway and turbines from China while sitting on its own reserves. Re-shoring energy supply chains and restarting domestic hydrocarbons is marketed as cheaper sovereignty. In unit-cost terms it runs the other way: domestic production over cheap imports, European turbines over subsidised Chinese ones, raises the near-term cost base before it lowers it. The forward curve already carries that weight even as spot collapses. French day-ahead power fell 39.6% Friday to $17.74 and German day-ahead dropped 25.1% to $72.46 — the same renewable-driven midday glut California shows — yet German Cal+1 holds at $93.45 and TTF Cal+1 at $36.68. EU storage is only 41.5% full, the Netherlands a thin 17.1%, and EUA carbon at $76.03 keeps a floor under every thermal megawatt. The spot weakness is weather. The forward strength is structure, and structure is what feeds 2027 inflation. The fuel the headline narrative leans on hardest is the one speculators are least willing to back. Brent closed at $92.78 and WTI at $90.54, and the European Commission's spring scenario can model a $180 spike on a prolonged Strait of Hormuz disruption that handles a fifth of the world's oil and a quarter of its LNG — but managed money is not positioned for it. The Brent net is short at -20,566 contracts, Henry Hub sits at a -114,730 net short, and even the long that exists is concentrated in domestic WTI at +124,259, a positioning that quietly fits the reshoring map. VIX jumped 39.8% Friday to $21.51, so fear is being repriced somewhere — just not through crude length. The energy inflation that arrives in 2026 is unlikely to come through the barrel CFTC traders are fading. It will come through intraday dispersion in constrained power markets, through the copper and steel bonded into the AI buildout, and through a cost of capital the Fed is holding high to fight an inflation its own instrument is helping entrench. The cleaner expression into Wednesday's print is not long crude. It is the front-to-back power curve, the electrical-metals complex, and the spread between the grid-locked East and the deflationary West — the places where this cost actually lives.
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