Episode Details

Back to Episodes
The Moment Common Knowledge Changed | Last Call - With Andy Constan, Ben Hunt, Brent Kochuba and Eric Pachman

The Moment Common Knowledge Changed | Last Call - With Andy Constan, Ben Hunt, Brent Kochuba and Eric Pachman

Published 19 hours ago
Description

This episode of our new market wrap show Last Call breaks down the biggest market drivers right now through three distinct lenses: macro, narrative, and flows. With an oil shock driven by geopolitical conflict, rising volatility, and conflicting economic signals, the discussion focuses on what actually matters beneath the surface and how investors should think about positioning in an environment where nothing is clearly priced in.

Follow Last Call on Spotify⁠⁠⁠

⁠⁠⁠Follow Last Call on Apple Podcasts⁠

Jack and Matt bring together Andy Constan, Ben Hunt, Brent Kochuba, and Eric Pachman to analyze the ripple effects of higher oil prices, the “common knowledge” shift in markets, the role of options flows in driving short-term moves, and why traditional economic indicators like unemployment may be telling a misleading story.

Andy Constan Twitter
https://x.com/dampedspring

Ben Hunt Twitter
https://x.com/EpsilonTheory

Brent Kochuba Twitter
https://x.com/spotgamma

Eric Pachman Twitter
https://x.com/epachman

Topics covered:

  • How oil supply shocks impact GDP, inflation, and consumer spending

  • Why higher oil prices act as a tax on the economy and shift growth dynamics

  • The difference between supply shocks and demand shocks in energy markets

  • Why central banks may be unable to respond to an oil-driven slowdown

  • The “common knowledge” framework and how narratives reshape markets

  • Why the Strait of Hormuz has become the key global economic bottleneck

  • Oil exporters vs importers and how that divide is driving asset performance

  • Why energy equities may outperform in a prolonged geopolitical conflict

  • How volatility is being driven by oil prices and geopolitical risk

  • The relationship between VIX and oil during crisis periods

  • Why $100 oil could trigger a major volatility spike and equity selloff

  • The JP Morgan collar trade and how options positioning can pin markets

  • How dealer hedging flows influence short-term price action

  • Why markets may appear disconnected from negative news

  • The limits of predicting what is “priced in” during uncertain environments

  • Why diversification matters more when macro visibility is low

  • How unemployment data can mislead by excluding people leaving the workforce

  • The difference between unemployment rate and labor force participation

  • Structural decline in rural economies and the migration to urban centers

  • How labor force trends explain the divergence in economic experiences across the US

Timestamps:
00:00 Oil shock as a GDP tax on consumers
00:16 Strait of Hormuz as global economic chokepoint
00:29 Why $100 oil could send VIX to 50
00:39 Why unemployment rate may be misleading
01:07 What Last Call is and how the episode is structured
02:28 Macro, narrative, and flows framework for markets
03:44 How oil supply shocks impact growth and inflation
06:00 Why higher oil prices reduce discretionary spending
07:00 Oil’s impact on inflation and central bank policy
09:39 Scenario analysis for oil prices and market outcomes
12:28 Is the oil shock priced into markets?
16:00 Why oil vs assets may be mispriced
20:00 Ben Hunt on the “common knowledge” market shift
25:00 Why the Strait of Hormuz changes everything
29:00 Portfolio implications: long energy vs global equities
33:00 Brent Kochuba on oil, V

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us