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#OilPricesRise
The core driver: the Iran war
Everything comes back to one factor. The ongoing U.S.-Israeli military conflict with Iran, now approaching six weeks, has severely disrupted the flow of crude through the Strait of Hormuz, one of the world's most critical oil shipping chokepoints. President Trump escalated rhetoric this week, stating publicly that attacks on Iran would be intensified over the next two to three weeks, sending markets into a sharp repricing.
Where prices stand right nowotential relief on the horizon
There was one note of cautious optimism Friday. Reports emerged that Iran and Oman are drafting a protocol to "monitor transit" through the Strait of Hormuz, raising early hopes that the waterway could be partially reopened. This is being watched closely, but oil prices continued rising regardless, as the market is not treating it as a confirmed resolution yet.
Broader market impact
The shock is rippling outward across multiple sectors and asset classes.
U.S. stocks saw volatile trading. The Dow Jones closed down 61 points Thursday, with major indexes ending near flat despite heavy intraday swings. Equity investors are trying to weigh energy sector gains against a broader drag on consumption-heavy businesses.
U.S. 10-year Treasury yields dipped to around 4.29%, reflecting a defensive tilt among bond investors even as oil-driven inflation fears grow. The Federal Reserve's path is now under pressure. With crude at these levels, March CPI data and the April 28 to 29 FOMC meeting become significantly more important. Analysts note that rate cuts, which were already fragile, could remain on hold for much of 2026 if energy inflation embeds itself in broader price data.
At the pump in the U.S., Midwest retail gasoline prices rose to a regional average of $3.71 per gallon, up from $3.68 the prior week, with petroleum analyst Patrick De Haan noting that markets are pricing in risk and volatility, not a permanent shutdown, and that prices could retreat quickly if tensions ease.
What to watch next
Trump's stated pause on attacking Iran's energy infrastructure was set to hold only until April 6. Markets are treating that date as a near-term risk event. Any further escalation involving Iranian oil wells or Kharg Island, the country's main crude export terminal, could push prices toward or beyond the 2008 all-time high. Conversely, a credible diplomatic breakthrough involving the Hormuz corridor would likely trigger a sharp pullback. The next 48 to 72 hours carry unusually high directional risk in the energy complex.