While geopolitical uncertainty has surged since the start of the US-Iran war in late February, unlike last year’s “Liberation Day” shock though, the war has had little impact on a nascent cyclical acceleration. The investment acceleration we had expected to take hold in 2026 arrived ahead of schedule, with 2025 marking the strongest full year of equipment capex growth since the post-GFC recovery. What began as a narrow surge in the tech/AI sectors has broadened to other industries and types of equipment spending. Capex has remained resilient in March and April. Capital goods shipments and imports have continued to accelerate along with domestic production of business equipment. Hyperscalers ramped up their capex guidance for FY 2026 in Q4 earnings calls around $130bn higher than what they forecasted in Q3. This was further pushed up by ~$55bn during Q1 earning announcements, partly due to higher prices amid capacity constraints. Despite the recent rise in interest rates, broader financial conditions appear accommodative, and bank C&I lending has continued to rise at a 15-20% annualized pace in recent weeks. Adding to the tailwinds for capex, tariff refunds have begun to ramp up. A cashflow windfall will likely support spending alongside strong growth in revenue and profits. The only weak spot seems to be consumer spending. Consumption has been resilient since the start of the US-Iran war. This strength is likely unsustainable though, with households relying on one-time stimulus cashflows to offset higher energy costs. We estimate households received ~$45bn in additional tax refunds this year due to the One Big Beautiful Bill Act passed last summer. For comparison, through May, we believe higher gasoline prices will have cost consumers ~$30bn. To summarise, we expect business investment to grow 7.8% in 2026 on a Q4/Q4 basis, driven by strong AI investment demand, expanded expensing provisions, and fading drags from the normalization of factory construction and tariffs. Coupled with last week’s GDP tracking data, this implies 2026 GDP growth of 2.1% on both a Q4/Q4 and full-year basis. It's on the inflation side where we see FOMC members turning hawkish last few weeks. Most notable was the hawkish pivot in an outlook speech by Governor Waller, who has represented the dovish core of the Committee. Waller indicated that his risk assessment had shifted towards inflation, which has replaced the labor market as the “driving force” behind monetary policy in the months ahead. Even household interest rate expectations are building in inflation expectations similar to financial markets. Specifically, the net interest rate expectations indicator from the Conference Board clearly shifted in the direction of foreseeing higher rates over the next twelve months. The current difference between the 2-year Treasury yield and the effective fed funds rate is ~40bps but this week high was 50 bps. Historically, that spread has been a reasonably good leading indicator for future changes in the fed funds rate. For example, over the past three decades, the difference between the 2y yield and fed funds rate leads the year-over-year change in the latter by roughly eleven months with a peak correlation of +66%. To summarise, recent Fed communications are consistent with a Fed that is well positioned near neutral but increasingly concerned that inflation may prove more persistent. While our baseline remains that the Fed is on hold near neutral indefinitely, we now see equal risks of a rate increase compared to a rate cut as the monetary policy outlook continues to be impacted by developments in the Middle East. We still think it is too early to have a convincing view on either a cut or a hike at least till we get clarity on the middle east conflict. We will be soon releasing a detailed piece on AI’s impact on US inflation. We believe while AI’s productivity gains put a cap on long term inflation, short term price impact of AI capex is leading to elevated goods inflation via semiconductor chips prices, computer flash memory & old computers.