Tuesday, 3/24/2026 a.m.

  • Stocks lower as optimism over war de-escalation fades - Markets remain on edge as the Iran conflict continues, with equities moving inversely to swings in oil prices. WTI crude is up more than 4% today to around $92 as mixed signals emerge regarding the conflict’s potential duration. Iran continues to deny ceasefire negotiations, though a steady stream of backchannel reports suggests some level of engagement may be underway. Bond yields are pushing to multi-month highs, with the 10‑year Treasury reaching 4.40%—the highest since July—as investors debate how central banks will respond to an energy‑driven rise in inflation. Meanwhile, gold erased its premarket gain after reports that Turkey may tap its gold reserves to defend the lira.
     
  • Survey data offer an early read on the conflict’s economic impact - The global preliminary Purchasing Managers' Index (PMI) data for March released today will provide an initial assessment of how the conflict is weighing on growth and inflation. Both the flash PMIs and eurozone consumer confidence declined in March. While the drop was expected given the spike in energy prices and elevated uncertainty, the fall in consumer confidence was the sharpest since the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022. The conflict is both growth-negative and inflation-positive, but we think that overall economic resilience should hold, with the duration of the conflict remaining the key variable. While there is no recent precedent for the scale of this energy disruption, U.S. oil prices have reached, and in some cases exceeded, current levels several times over the past 15 years without tipping the economy into recession*. Oil prices today are trading at comparable levels, but the underlying fundamentals are stronger, in our view. Consumers’ disposable income has nearly doubled since 2011, household debt relative to income remains low, and unemployment is still low by historical standards. At the same time, the ongoing AI investment boom and continued innovation are providing an additional source of support for growth.
     
  • Fed on hold as it performs a balancing act - Amid the current energy shock, the Federal Reserve must balance downside risks to the labor market against upside risks to inflation. Historically, central banks have tended to look through temporary spikes in oil prices. But with inflation running above target for five years, the latest surge in energy costs complicates that stance. At last week’s meeting, the Fed avoided major changes, maintaining one rate cut in its forecast—signaling a willingness to look through a one‑time boost to inflation. Unlike in 2022, when energy prices surged after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, today’s labor market is no longer tight, policy is no longer highly accommodative, and fiscal stimulus is modest. We believe rate cuts are delayed, not derailed, and we would look to lock in high yields in intermediate‑ and long‑term bonds if the 10‑year approaches 4.5%.

Angelo Kourkafas, CFA ;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data not cited: Bloomberg. 
Cited sources: * International Energy Agency

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