Last week, U.S. markets faced a difficult combination of
forces: an oil shock from the war in Iran and the effective closure of
the Strait
of Hormuz, a job market showing cracks, and inflation
data that, while recently contained, is now under pressure from rising
energy costs.
Stocks came in wounded from the prior week and stayed under
pressure as oil swung
sharply between $88 and $120 a barrel. The growing fear is that a
prolonged supply disruption could drive energy prices meaningfully higher just
as the economy softens.
Here's how the major indices ended the week.
Stock Index Performance
Macro Snapshot
- Inflation: Good news, with a catch. February's
inflation report was the most encouraging in years, with prices up 2.4%
annually and underlying inflation steady around 2.5%. But that data
predates the conflict in Iran. The oil spike that followed could lift
energy and headline prices considerably higher in the months ahead.
- Oil is the wildcard. Iran's threats to block
the Strait of Hormuz have rattled energy markets and pushed average
U.S. gas prices up over
20% since this time last month. Analysts see a wide range of outcomes for
where oil prices will land, ranging from a retreat if disruptions ease to
steep increases if the conflict persists.
- The Fed is stuck in the middle. With inflation
still above target, jobs softening, and an oil shock in the mix, the
Federal Reserve faces an uncomfortable set of choices. Rate cuts are
harder to justify if energy prices re-accelerate, but rate hikes would
pressure an already slowing economy. The Fed is still set to hold rates at
3.50% to 3.75%, and markets now expect just two small cuts by
year-end.
The Week Ahead
- The market•s focus shifts to the Fed's March 17•18 meeting,
the first of 2026 to include updated economic projections. The real
question is what the Fed signals about the path ahead. Will the committee
still pencil in multiple cuts this year, or shift toward higher for
longer, given rising energy costs and a weakening job market?
- The conflict in Iran remains the other major unknown. The
turmoil has already taken an estimated 20% of regional crude and gas
supply offline, triggering the largest weekly oil price jump since the
early 1980s. Markets will be watching whether tanker attacks intensify or
ease and how quickly Gulf producers can restore flows. Escalation could
push crude toward $150 or beyond, while a cooling of tensions could bring
some relief at the pump.
Between a Fed meeting, an active conflict reshaping global
energy flows, and an economy sending conflicting signals, the week ahead will
demand patience.