I think these numbers will increase during the weekend, brace for impact on Monday, my dear average peeps around the world. Stay calm, safe and compassionate❤️
125
PoliticsIsDepressingMar 21, 2026
+30
I think everything comes unraveled very soon. Oils/markets have been acting like it’ll be over soon.
30
meglobobMar 20, 2026
+50
Its lucky N. America, Europe & China heading into Summer, not Winter.
If we had been heading into Autumn / Winter it probably would be above $150, heading to $200+.
There simply wouldn't have been enough supply to go around, so some would just after do with out.
50
DoublePostedBroskiMar 20, 2026
+32
In the U.S. gas prices in the summer are higher because it has to be blended differently
32
obi_wan_the_phonyMar 21, 2026
+6
They’ll relax blend requirements. Consumer will lose out but it’ll artificially depress prices which is all people care about
6
JaykenMar 20, 2026
+19
We're going to see $7-8 gas by June.
19
NotoriouslydishonestMar 21, 2026
+6
I would personally bet thousands of dollars that the average US has price will be less than $7 for the whole month of June.
6
NotPromKingMar 21, 2026
+12
Not sure I could trust a bet with you, /u/Notoriouslydishonest
12
rocketpastsixMar 21, 2026
+1
I hope so. If it hits that price in Tennessee, where I am, it may snap people out of the trance they’ve been in.
1
fuck-naziMar 20, 2026
+6
Winter and summer both have different requirements, so while you’re not wrong… it’s kind of like saying nite and day are different
6
WiseBurachoMar 21, 2026
+5
I would think Americans will feel the impact more as summer travel goes in. Airplane tickets. Road trips.
5
fuck-naziMar 20, 2026
+40
Honestly, and ai know this would f*** my finances and obviously a large portion of the world as well, I hope we see $200+. That might, I would hope, be the stick that breaks the camels back in the US and summon such an overwhelming blue wave that dems would take the senate and the house. Then they can start rat f****** all the enablers of this bull shit
40
YogurtclosetNo987Mar 21, 2026
+32
Yeah, but have you considered this is all Biden's fault? And whatever isn't his fault his Obama's. And whatever isn't either their fault is Jimmy Carter's, but don't ask them how. And also the immigrants and the trans people.
32
KemmensMar 21, 2026
+6
Not the peanut farmer 🥺
6
Eagle4317Mar 21, 2026
+13
The Democrats aren't going to make any meaningful changes to prevent this from happening again. At best, they're going to return to the old status quo. That would be a massive rebound from the current disaster, but it doesn't fix our long-term outlook.
13
LeafRunnerMar 21, 2026
+3
Sorry but I'm a chud too busy blaming DEI
3
WurstpaketMar 21, 2026
+1
This would aso be very painful but ultimately beneficial for the rest if the world.
The age of Oil is coming to an end, but many still condemn renewables and EVs for different reasons, ultimately a shift away from oil as the main energy source will be inevitable.
1
Danne660Mar 21, 2026
+1
As an enviromentalist that want us to use a lot less oil it would be a bit hypocritical of me to be to upset about high oil prices.
1
VaryStaybullGeenyissMar 21, 2026
-7
As if they'd do anything if they win. Dems love war and deportations and basically everything else Trump does. They won't do shit about shit.
-7
Wonderful-Process792Mar 21, 2026
+10
You need to revisit the track record of dems vs republican Presidents starting wars in this century.
10
VaryStaybullGeenyissMar 21, 2026
-11
Dems are always happy to have repubs do their dirty work for them.
-11
Wonderful-Process792Mar 21, 2026
+7
Uhhhh... whatever. To me the contrast between George Bush Jr / Trump, vs Obama / Biden, is too obvious to argue its existence.
Does that mean any President will want to or be able to make the USA do just what you want, no it does not.
7
VaryStaybullGeenyissMar 21, 2026
-2
That's the whole point of the controlled opposition scheme though. Appear to be better than the opposition, but never do anything materially significant in opposition.
-2
2plus2_equals_5Mar 20, 2026
+6
Uncertainty about what will happen in the war has led to manic back-and-forth swings in the oil and stock markets since the war began nearly three weeks ago.
Currency traders work near a screen showing the Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI), top center, and the foreign exchange rate between U.S. dollar and South Korean won, top center left, at the foreign exchange dealing room of the Hana Bank headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, Thursday, March 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon) AP
By STAN CHOE, Associated Press
March 20, 2026 | 6:06 PM
NEW YORK (AP) — A roller-coaster day for oil prices showed how they’re dictating where financial markets and maybe even the global economy are heading. Stocks tumbled in Europe and Asia when oil prices shot higher early on Thursday, but U.S. stocks pared their sharp losses as the day progressed and oil prices fell back.
The morning began with the shock of Brent crude, the international standard, briefly rising above $119 per barrel, up from roughly $70 before the war with Iran began.
The jump followed intensified attacks by Iran on oil and gas facilities around the Persian Gulf in response to an Israeli attack on an important Iranian natural gas field. They worsened fears that the war could knock out oil and gas production in the Middle East for a long time, which would mean high prices could last a while and cause inflation to rip higher around the world.
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Stock indexes dropped 3.4% in Japan, 2.8% in Germany and 2.7% in South Korea. But oil prices pared their big gains as the day progressed, the latest in their hour-to-hour swings since the war began.
Brent oil settled at $108.65, up only 1.2% from the day before, and then eased further as trading continued. After briefly topping $101, a barrel of benchmark U.S. crude settled at $96.14 and then fell toward $94.
That helped stocks on Wall Street pare their own losses, which were already more modest than in Europe and Asia because U.S. companies are less reliant on oil from the Middle East.
The S&P 500 finished with a dip of 0.3% after coming back from an early loss of 1%. It even briefly turned higher in the last hour of trading. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 203 points, or 0.4%, and the Nasdaq composite fell 0.3%.
President Donald Trump and countries around the world have made moves to stem the spike in oil prices. But they’re mostly short-term fixes, and markets want to see less risk for oil and gas fields around the Gulf and a clearance of the Strait of Hormuz off Iran’s coast, where a fifth of the world’s oil typically sails.
Late on Thursday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said his country will hold off on any further attacks on the Iranian gas field, at Trump’s request.
Uncertainty about what will happen in the war has led to manic back-and-forth swings in the oil and stock markets since the war began nearly three weeks ago. The yo-yo movements also hit the bond market Thursday, as Treasury yields jumped in the morning with the price of oil and then eased back.
The two-year Treasury yield got as high as 3.96% before receding to 3.79%, which is a major move for the bond market. The two-year yield tends to follow expectations for what the Federal Reserve will do with short-term interest rates.
Oil prices have gotten so high that traders are nixing bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates even once this year. It’s a dramatic turnaround from before the war, when traders were betting heavily that the Fed would cut rates multiple times.
Cuts to rates would give the economy and prices for investments a boost, and they’re something Trump has angrily been calling for, but they would risk worsening inflation. The Fed on Wednesday decided to hold off on cutting interest rates at its latest meeting, and traders found comments from Chair Jerome Powell discouraging about the possibility for cuts in 2026.
Now, traders are betting on a 73% chance that the Fed will hold rates steady this year or maybe even raise them, according to data from CME Group. Just a month ago, those same traders were betting on a 74% probability that the Fed would cut rates at least twice.
Earlier in the day, the Bank of Japan, the European Central Bank and the Bank of England held their own interest rates steady.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield held at 4.26%, where it was late Wednesday. But it’s still well above its 3.97% level from before the war with Iran started.
Higher Treasury yields have already sent rates for mortgages and other kinds of loans upward, and a report on Thursday showed sales of new U.S. homes unexpectedly weakened in January.
Higher Treasury yields also grind down on prices for all kinds of investments, from stocks to crypto to gold. Gold sank 5.9% to settle at $4,605.70 per ounce. Silver fell even more and dropped 8.2%.
Stocks of companies that mine such metals fell to some of Wall Street’s sharpest losses. Newmont slumped 6.9%, and Freeport-McMoRan fell 3.3%.
Micron Technology fell 3.8% even though it reported a blowout quarter of much higher profit and revenue than analysts expected. It gave back some of its big gain for the year so far, which came into the day at nearly 62% because of a worldwide shortage for computer memory.
Helping to limit Wall Street’s losses was Rivian Automotive, which rose 3.8%. It announced a partnership in which Uber will invest up to $1.25 billion in the company and expects to buy 10,000 autonomous robotaxis. Uber Technologies fell 1.7%.
All told, the S&P 500 fell 18.21 points to 6,606.49. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 203.72 to 46,021.43, and the Nasdaq composite sank 61.73 to 22,090.69
6
DarkTurdleMar 20, 2026
+10
Are these numbers from yesterday? All US markets were down significantly more than that today
10
JaykenMar 20, 2026
+5
They are. Dow is at roughly 45,000 now.
5
DefinitelynotaslothMar 21, 2026
+2
Send Barron Trump to the Middle East. He can be like Paul Atreides and unite the region.
2
AV15Mar 21, 2026
+2
This is not a war for oil it's a war for the life of the petrodollar.
The US is prepared to spend trillions and unlimited body count, enemy and friend to keep the USD the world reserve currency for oil trade
2
hugelkultMar 21, 2026
+1
Nah theres only appetite for this on one part of the right. The other part is eating ivermectin. Politics only reflects their handlers and right now the handlers seem to be voters. Voters hate trump. Voters hate billionaires. If somehow power is removed from voters then its revolt in America. The world must take a number
1
AV15Mar 21, 2026
+1
Thanks for the reply but it's a bit of a mess. Petrodollar theory is taught in economics and foreign policy programs. The willingness to absorb enormous cost to maintain dollar hegemony is consistent with decades of US foreign policy.
Think you're conflating domestic politics with the geopolitical. Whether Trump voters eat ivermectin is mostly irrelevant to whether the US has incentives to protect the petrodollar. Totally separate conversations.
Reality...if voters were actually controlling policy you'd expect less military adventurism, not more.which we always get regardless. and financial interests make these decisions independent of voter appetite.
Revolt point is interesting and worth thinking about in the idea that domestic instability limits US foreign fuckery as overstretched empire with internal mess is a real problem. But that's a nuanced and not really sure what you're saying about it.
Petrodollar issue isnabove left/right politics entirely. Reducing to Republican factions misses the overarching issue
1
hugelkultMar 21, 2026
+1
Petrodollar depends on US hegemony yes? Trunp table-flips US hegemony yes? US pop table flips trump. Doesnt revert the change to US hegemony. See you next year!
31 Comments