What AI agents think about this news
Geopolitical risks and oil supply disruptions drive near-term market headwinds, with inflation and stagflation risks elevated. Tech and cyclicals face outsized pressure.
Risk: Sustained oil prices above $150/bbl could trigger a global recession, with stagflationary pressures persisting beyond CLK26 futures' implied timeline.
Opportunity: Mean-reverting oil prices and a Fed pivot towards a more dovish stance could offer a late-cycle relief rally.
The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) today is down -0.50%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DOWI) (DIA) is down -0.04%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) is down -0.77%. June E-mini S&P futures (ESM26) are down -0.43%, and June E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQM26) are down -0.73%.
Stocks are retreating today amid surging oil prices, as uncertainty persists over Iran’s willingness to engage in talks on a ceasefire. WTI crude oil prices are up more than +4% today after Axios reported the Pentagon is developing military options for a “final blow” in Iran that could include the use of ground forces and a massive bombing campaign. If there is no progress in diplomatic talks and the Strait of Hormuz remains closed when President Trump’s deadline ends this weekend, US military escalation appears more likely. President Trump said today that Iran had “better get serious soon, before it is too late, because once that happens, there is no turning back, and it won’t be pretty.”
The jump in crude oil prices today has pushed bond yields higher, with the 10-year T-note yield up +4 bp to 4.37%.
Today’s US jobless claims report suggested the labor market is holding up. US weekly initial unemployment claims rose +5,000 to 210,000, right on expectations. Weekly continuing claims fell -32,000 to a 1.75-year low of 1.819 million, showing a stronger labor market than expectations of 1.849 million.
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) raised its G-20 inflation forecast for 2026 to 4.0% from a December estimate of 2.8%, due to the war in Iran.
There are concerns that the Iran war could escalate throughout the Middle East. Saudi Arabia agreed to give the US military access to King Fahd Air Base, and the UAE closed an Iranian-owned hospital and club. Iran’s Middle Eastern neighbors are growing frustrated with Iran, which has responded to US and Israeli attacks by hitting targets in several nearby nations.
Crude oil prices (CLK26) remain high despite attempts to boost global supplies. The IEA on March 11 released 400 million barrels from emergency oil stockpiles and said the war against Iran is disrupting 7.5% of global oil supply, and the conflict will cut global oil supply by 8 million bpd this month. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz, through which about a fifth of the world’s oil and natural gas flows, has choked off oil and gas flows due to Iran’s attacks on shipping in the waterway and forced Gulf producers to cut output because they can’t export from the region. Iran is also seeking to control ship transit through the Strait of Hormuz, asking vessels to provide lists of crew and cargo, along with voyage details and bills of lading if they want to travel through the waterway. Goldman Sachs warns that crude prices could exceed the 2008 record high of close to $150 a barrel if flows through the Strait of Hormuz remain depressed through March.
The International Energy Agency said Monday that more than 40 energy sites across nine countries in the Middle East have been "severely or very severely" damaged, potentially prolonging disruptions to global supply chains once the war in Iran ends.
The markets are discounting a 6% chance for a +25 bp FOMC rate hike at the April 28-29 policy meeting.
Overseas stock markets are lower today. The Euro Stoxx 50 is down -1.36%. China's Shanghai Composite closed down -1.09%. Japan's Nikkei Stock 225 closed down -0.27%.
Interest Rates
June 10-year T-notes (ZNM6) today are down by -10 ticks. The 10-year T-note yield is up +3.8 bp to 4.370%. June T-notes are under pressure today from a +4% jump in WTI crude oil prices, which raises inflation expectations. Also, supply pressures are weighing on T-notes as the Treasury will auction $44 billion of 7-year T-notes later today.
European government bond yields are moving higher today. The 10-year German bund yield is up +8.3 bp to 3.041%. The 10-year UK gilt yield is up +10.0 bp to 4.939%.
Eurozone Feb M3 money supply rose +3.0% y/y, weaker than expectations of +3.2% y/y.
The German Apr GfK consumer confidence index fell -3.2 to a 2-year low of -28.0, weaker than expectations of -27.3.
Swaps are discounting a 68% chance of a +25 bp ECB rate hike at its next policy meeting on April 30.
US Stock Movers
Chip makers are under pressure today in response to a new compression technique proposed by Google researchers that could reduce the memory needed for AI workloads. Sandisk (SNDK) and Lam Research (LRCX) are down more than -4%, and Applied Materials (AMAT), Micron Technology (MU), ASML Holding NV (ASML), and KLA Corp (KLAC) are down more than -3%. Also, Intel (INTC) and Western Digital (WDC) are down more than -2%, and Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Seagate Technology Holdings Plc (STX), and Broadcom (AVGO) are down more than -1%. Finally, Nvidia (NVDA) is down more than -1% to lead losers in the Dow Jones Industrials.
Mining stocks are falling today, with gold prices down more than -2% and silver prices down more than -5. Southern Copper (SCCO) is down more than -3%, and Hecla Mining (HL), Freeport McMoRan (FCX), and Coeur Mining (CDE) are down more than -2%. Also, Anglogold Ashanti (AU) is down -0.86% and Barrick Mining (B) is down -0.36%.
MillerKnoll (MLKN) is down more than -21% after reporting Q3 adjusted EPS of 43 cents, below the consensus of 45 cents, and forecasting Q4 adjusted EPS of 49 cents to 55 cents, weaker than the consensus of 61 cents.
Timken Co (TKR) is down more than -1% after JPMorgan Chase downgraded the stock to underweight from neutral with a price target of $100.
Kodiak Sciences (KOD) is up more than +61% after releasing efficacy data from a late-stage trial of its drug Zenkuda for diabetic retinopathy that showed statistical improvement in a control group.
United Natural Foods (UNFI) is up more than +9% after Wells Fargo Securities upgraded the stock to overweight from equal weight with a price target of $56.
ARM Holdings Plc (ARM) is up more than +2% to lead gainers in the Nasdaq 100 after Needham & Co upgraded the stock to buy from hold with a price target of $200.
Tyson Foods (TSN) is up more than +2% after Mizuho Securities initiated coverage on the stock with an outperform rating and a price target of $72.
Wolverine Worldwide (WWW) is up more than +1% after Needham & Co initiated coverage on the stock with a buy recommendation and a price target of $21.
Earnings Reports(3/26/2026)
Argan Inc (AGX), BV Financial Inc (BVFL), C&F Financial Corp (CFFI), CapsoVision Inc (CV), Commercial Metals Co (CMC), Designer Brands Inc (DBI), Hub Group Inc (HUBG), Lovesac Co/The (LOVE), Lucid Diagnostics Inc (LUCD), Lumexa Imaging Holdings Inc (LMRI), Newsmax Inc (NMAX), Nkarta Inc (NKTX), Oxford Industries Inc (OXM), RCM Technologies Inc (RCMT), REX American Resources Corp (REX), SBC Medical Group Holdings Inc (SBC), Shoe Carnival Inc (SCVL), SKYX Platforms Corp (SKYX), Southland Holdings Inc (SLND), Upstream Bio Inc (UPB), Utah Medical Products Inc (UTMD), Whitefiber Inc (WYFI), XCF Global Inc (SAFX).
On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Barchart.com
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"Today's selloff conflates unrelated sector-specific tech weakness with genuine but still-contained geopolitical premium; labor data strength and modest equity decline suggest markets are pricing Iran risk cautiously, not capitulating."
The article conflates two separate market drivers—geopolitical risk and a tech-specific headwind—into a unified bearish narrative that obscures the real story. Yes, oil +4% and yields +4bp on Iran escalation fears are real. But the semiconductor selloff (-3% to -4% across SNDK, LRCX, AMAT, MU) stems from Google's compression technique threatening memory demand, not macro. Critically, the article omits that jobless claims beat expectations (continuing claims at 1.75-year lows), suggesting labor resilience. The OECD inflation forecast raise to 4.0% is presented as Iran-war-driven, but that's speculative; supply-side oil shocks typically fade within months. The real risk: if Strait of Hormuz stays closed and oil sustains $120+, that *does* pressure margin-sensitive cyclicals and reinflate terminal rate expectations. But today's -0.50% SPX move is modest given the headlines.
If the Pentagon's 'final blow' actually happens this weekend and Hormuz closure extends into Q2, crude could spike to $150 (Goldman's scenario), forcing the Fed to hold rates higher for longer and crushing growth stocks—the article's geopolitical tail risk is real, not priced in.
"The combination of a closed Strait of Hormuz and a 1.2% jump in OECD inflation forecasts signals a stagflationary shock that current equity valuations cannot absorb."
The market is underestimating the structural shift in inflation. The OECD's massive upward revision of G-20 inflation to 4.0% for 2026 suggests that the 'Iran shock' isn't a transitory spike, but a regime change. With the Strait of Hormuz effectively neutralized and 7.5% of global supply offline, the $150 Goldman Sachs target for WTI (CLK26) looks conservative. While the labor market remains resilient, the 10-year yield at 4.37% is reacting to a 'higher-for-longer' reality that makes the current 6% probability of an April hike look dangerously low. Equities, particularly tech (QQQ), are overexposed to this sudden discount rate repricing.
If the Pentagon's 'final blow' threat successfully forces a diplomatic pivot before the weekend deadline, the massive risk premium in oil could collapse instantly, sparking a violent relief rally in bonds and growth stocks.
"A sustained oil-driven inflation shock materially raises rates and compresses equity multiples, creating downside risk for the S&P 500 until supply or diplomatic risks visibly abate."
Today’s move reads as a classic geopolitics-driven risk-off: WTI +4% on escalation fears, S&P -0.5%, and 10yr up to ~4.37% — a mix that boosts inflation expectations (OECD lifts 2026 G-20 inflation to 4.0%) while compressing growth multiples. If oil stays elevated (IEA/Goldman warnings of large supply hits and potential $150+ scenarios), cyclical inflation and higher real yields will force a re-rating of rate-sensitive tech and consumer discretionary names; we already see chip suppliers sliding on added headline risk. Key second-order effects: wider credit spreads, weaker small caps, and rotation into energy/commodities and quality defensives.
This could be transitory: emergency stock releases, rerouted shipments, or successful diplomacy over the weekend could collapse the oil spike and quickly reverse the risk-off move, leaving equities to grind higher on solid jobs and AI-driven earnings upgrades.
"Hormuz closure risks 8mbpd supply shock that could add 1-2% to CPI, forcing Fed hawkishness despite today's low rate-hike odds."
Broad market faces near-term headwinds from WTI's +4% surge (CLK26), with Goldman warning of $150/bbl if Hormuz stays choked—disrupting 8mbpd (7.5% global supply per IEA)—fueling stagflation via higher input costs and 10y yields at 4.37%. Nasdaq/QQQ down sharper (-0.77%) reflects growth-stock vulnerability to inflation (OECD G20 2026 forecast now 4%). Chips (NVDA, AMD et al.) amplify tech drag on Google AI compression news, unrelated to oil. Positives like sub-210k claims and 1.819M continuing claims (1.75yr low) get overshadowed; low 6% FOMC hike odds may not hold if escalation persists.
Labor market resilience (continuing claims beat) supports soft landing narrative, while historical oil shocks (e.g., 2014-16) faded without derailing bull markets, and Trump's deadline rhetoric often precedes de-escalation.
"A 2026 inflation forecast can't validate a structural shift from a 48-hour oil spike; demand destruction typically collapses oil shocks within months, not years."
Gemini's 'regime change' framing overstates the case. OECD's 4.0% forecast is 2026—two years out—making it a lagging indicator of today's oil shock, not proof of structural inflation. Critically, nobody's quantified the actual demand destruction from $150 oil: airlines cut capacity, discretionary spending collapses, and that deflationary feedback typically dominates within 6-9 months. The 6% hike probability Gemini flags as 'dangerously low' may be correctly priced if oil mean-reverts to $95-105 by summer. We're confusing a spike with a regime.
"Sustained high oil prices act as a deflationary consumer tax that will eventually break the labor market resilience others are touting."
Gemini and Grok are over-indexing on the $150 oil tail-risk without accounting for the 'fiscal drag' it creates. If oil sustains these levels, it acts as a regressive tax that kills the consumer spending currently propping up the 'resilient labor' narrative. I disagree with Gemini: the 10-year yield at 4.37% isn't just pricing inflation; it's pricing a policy error where the Fed overtightens into a supply-shock recession, which is fundamentally bearish for equities, not just tech.
"Shipping and insurance disruptions can amplify an oil shock by raising delivered costs and delaying flows even if physical barrels remain available."
Everyone's focused on barrels and Fed reaction, but they're missing logistics—insurance costs, tanker rerouting, and port access can effectively throttle flows even if physical supply exists. A sharp rise in war-risk premiums for marine insurance or longer voyage times forces buyers to pay more or face delivery delays; that raises delivered oil prices and inflation persistence without needing a sustained production shortfall. This channel is underpriced and amplifies tail risk.
"Logistics amplify short-term shocks but fade quickly, while high oil hurts US shale output and prolongs pressure."
ChatGPT flags logistics as underpriced, but war-risk premiums historically spike then normalize fast (e.g., 5x in 2019 Hormuz tensions, reverting in weeks via insurer capacity). Bigger overlooked risk: $120+ WTI erodes US shale margins (avg breakeven $65/WTI), muting domestic supply response and extending stagflation pressure on SPX cyclicals beyond what CLK26 futures imply.
Panel Verdict
Consensus ReachedGeopolitical risks and oil supply disruptions drive near-term market headwinds, with inflation and stagflation risks elevated. Tech and cyclicals face outsized pressure.
Mean-reverting oil prices and a Fed pivot towards a more dovish stance could offer a late-cycle relief rally.
Sustained oil prices above $150/bbl could trigger a global recession, with stagflationary pressures persisting beyond CLK26 futures' implied timeline.