(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a
columnist for Reuters.)
By Mike Dolan
March 12 -
What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-At-Large, Finance and Markets
Crude oil is testing $100 per barrel once again, briefly topping
that important threshold overnight after rising nearly 5% on
Wednesday, as more attacks on ships in the Gulf outweighed the
impact of the International Energy Agency's plan for a record
release of crude reserves. Oil market volatility by one gauge
recently hit levels not seen since 2020.
Iran, clearly aware that an oil shock is one of its biggest
defensive weapons, warned yesterday that the conflict could send
oil to $200 per barrel - and the Islamic Republic seems in no
hurry to free Gulf shipping as long as the war rages.
I'll get into that and more below.
But first, check out my latest column on why the lessons of the
Ukraine war may now embolden hawks on the ECB.
And listen to today's episode of the Morning Bid podcast, where
I discuss the longer-term implications of this oil shock.
Subscribe to hear Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news
in markets and finance seven days a week.
TRIPLE DIGIT CRUDE
Stock markets are down across the world again on the latest jump
on oil, with major U.S. indexes finishing flat to lower on
Wednesday and Asian indexes giving up some recent gains on
Thursday. European and U.S. stock futures were down before the
bell.
The oil market's shrug at the record 400-million-barrel
reserve release is worrying and an indication of the timeline
traders are now contemplating.
The 400 million barrels - more than twice the release seen after
the Ukraine invasion in 2022 - would cover about 2-4 weeks of
global demand. If the war is still shutting down the Gulf after
that, markets could tighten further.
With that timeline in mind, financial markets are already
turning attention to potential inflation impacts and central
bank responses.
A second U.S. interest rate cut has all but disappeared from the
Fed futures curve, with markets now pricing in barely one for
2026. February CPI inflation numbers came in as expected, but
that data is from before this oil shock.
Looking ahead, there's a sweep of central bank decisions
next week. The Reserve Bank of Australia is expected to raise
interest rates again. Markets are already fully priced for a
European Central Bank rate rise by July, and mortgage rates are
rising again in Britain. No central bank is likely to be brave
enough to cut in this environment.
Meantime, U.S. Treasury yields hit their highest in almost
six months heading into Thursday. Soft debt auctions haven't
helped restore confidence this week.
And the dollar continued to firm on the dwindling rate cut
expectations, holding near its strongest levels of the year so
far, weighing down gold in turn.
Chart of the day
The IEA has coordinated emergency stock releases only four times
since it was created by OECD members in the mid-1970s in
response to the 1973 OPEC oil embargo. The infrequency
underscores the gravity of the current situation, writes ROI
Energy Columnist Ron Bousso.
Today's events to watch
* U.S. January trade balance (8:30 AM EDT), January housing
starts (8:30 AM EDT), weekly jobless claims (8:30 AM EDT)
* U.S. 30-year note auction
* Fed's Michelle Bowman speaks
* International Energy Agency releases its March 2026 Oil
Market Report
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect
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committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.