Donald Trump unsurprisingly dominated the news cycle in his first week back in office. To make sense of what he's pledged, threatened and suggested so far, Group Chief Economist Neil Shearing is on The Weekly Briefing from Capital Economics to discuss what we know about tariffs, how global central banks are meant to navigate this more uncertain new environment and whether the Fed is in for a particularly contentious relationship with the White House.
Plus, the new president has already made a big splash in oil markets, including an Inauguration Day pledge to “drill baby, drill” and a call for Saudi Arabia to lower prices. David Oxley, Kieran Tompkins, Olivia Cross and Hamad Hussain from our Commodities and Climate team address the issues that Trump has raised around oil and explain why downside risks to prices have just grown.
Analysis and events referenced in this episode:
Central Bank Hub
/data-and-charts/central-bank-hub
Analysis and events referenced in this episode:
Central Bank Hub
/data-and-charts/central-bank-hub
Read: Strong dollar is a problem for tomorrow
/publications/global-economics-focus/strong-dollar-problem-tomorrow
Event: Fed, ECB and BoE – Unpacking the first rate decisions of 2025
/events/drop-fed-ecb-and-boe-unpacking-first-rate-decisions-2025
Read: What to make of Trump’s National Energy Emergency?
/publications/commodities-focus/what-make-trumps-national-energy-emergency
Read: How low could oil prices go if Saudi open the oil taps?
/publications/commodities-update/how-low-could-oil-prices-go-if-saudi-open-oil-taps