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  • Wall Street shrugs off oil shock, testing the “Buy-the-Dip” reflex

    Wall Street’s surprisingly calm response to an historic oil shock is being cast as either a sign of rational pricing or a sign that investors have been conditioned by the last few decades to treat geopolitical crises as tradable noise. The puzzle is stark: crude prices just delivered one of the biggest weekly jumps in modern futures history, yet the S&P 500 barely budged by comparison, and the Nasdaq’s dip was even smaller.

    Outside the United States, equity markets are behaving more like you’d expect in an energy shock, with sharper losses across Europe, Asia, and emerging markets. The question the piece is really asking is whether the U.S. equity market is correctly anticipating a contained economic impact, or whether it is failing to price the fat-tail risk that comes with a real supply disruption and a sustained oil move above $100.

    March 10, 2026
  • China’s crude imports surge as Beijing builds an energy-security buffer

    China’s early-year crude import surge is being interpreted less as a simple demand rebound and more as an explicit energy-security stockbuild, timed to a moment when the Gulf supply system is at its most fragile in decades.

    Customs data show China brought in 96.93 million tons of crude in January-February, about a 16% year-on-year increase, and the market read-through is that the extra barrels are going into commercial and strategic storage rather than being fully absorbed by end-use consumption.

    March 10, 2026
  • Oil majors urge EU to pause methane import rules before 2027

    Europe’s oil-and-gas majors are trying to turn the EU’s methane-import rules into the next big “competitiveness and security-of-supply” fight, arguing that a regulation designed as a climate enforcement tool is now at risk of becoming a self-inflicted import shock just as geopolitics is making energy markets more fragile.

    Their request is blunt: pause the methane law, amend it, and buy time before the strictest import provisions bite in 2027. IOGP and FuelsEurope, representing firms including ExxonMobil, Chevron, BP and TotalEnergies, are pushing this line as oil and gas prices surge amid the Iran war, when European governments are already anxious about supply security and industry is shouting about high energy costs.

    March 10, 2026
  • Russia waiver becomes India’s shock absorber in Gulf crisis

    India is signaling that it intends to ride out the first phase of the Iran-war energy shock without joining an International Energy Agency coordinated strategic petroleum reserve release, even as oil spikes above $119 and G7 finance ministers discuss a potential drawdown to calm markets.

    The message from officials is that New Delhi doesn’t see itself as short of crude or refined products in the near term, and therefore doesn’t want to burn strategic ammunition early in what could become a longer crisis. India is an IEA associate member rather than a full member, which also gives it more latitude to opt out of coordinated actions when it believes domestic conditions don’t warrant participation.

    March 10, 2026
  • Stagflation fears return as Middle East conflict turns into macro shock

    Investors are starting to treat the Middle East war less like a transient “risk premium” and more like the kind of macro shock that can remake the policy and asset-pricing environment, specifically, a stagflationary setup reminiscent of the 1970s, where energy scarcity pushed inflation up while growth sagged.

    The defining feature of that regime is not simply “bad growth” or “high inflation” on their own, but the way they arrive together and force central banks and markets into uncomfortable trade-offs: policy can’t easily support growth without risking inflation, and it can’t easily crush inflation without worsening growth and financial stress.

    March 10, 2026
  • Europe’s retailers face a fresh energy-inflation squeeze

    Europe’s retail sector is being dragged back into an energy-driven cost trap at the worst possible moment: not during a post-pandemic demand boom, but during a period of sluggish growth, stretched household budgets, and already-fragile consumer confidence. The renewed spike in oil and gas prices triggered by the U.S.-Israeli war with Iran is hitting retailers just as they were trying to stabilize after the 2022 energy-inflation shock.

    The market reaction of retail equities sliding from apparel to grocers reflects a familiar fear: higher energy costs don’t stay “in energy,” they leak into logistics, store operations, supplier pricing, and ultimately the consumer basket, forcing companies to choose between margin compression and price hikes into weak demand.

    March 10, 2026
  • Aluminium hits four-year high as Hormuz shuts Gulf deliveries

    Aluminium’s leap to four-year highs is a classic “deliverability shock” move: the market is paying up for metal that can be delivered now, in locations and forms that are usable by Western buyers, as Gulf supply is effectively trapped behind a shipping chokepoint and inventories elsewhere are thin or politically constrained.

    The initial spike toward $3,544/ton, before prices eased back, reflects how quickly the market reprices when the Strait of Hormuz is treated as commercially closed and the Middle East, a major non-Chinese production hub, can’t reliably move metal to Europe and the US. The conflict has “virtually shut” Hormuz, directly hitting the region’s aluminium export flows.

    March 10, 2026
  • Trump signals conditional sanctions relief as Gulf shipping freeze bites

    President Donald Trump says the US is temporarily easing some oil-related sanctions to keep global crude supplies flowing and cap prices while shipping through the Strait of Hormuz remains severely disrupted. Speaking at his Doral golf club, he argued that prices have not risen as sharply as he had feared and indicated the US would lift certain sanctions “until the Strait is up,” without naming specific countries or measures.

    The immediate backdrop is that the Hormuz disruption has turned sanctions policy into a supply-management tool. In normal conditions, sanctions are meant to constrain targeted states’ revenues and strategic behavior. In a chokepoint crisis, the White House has to balance that objective against the political and macroeconomic damage of sustained high fuel prices.

    March 10, 2026

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