WSJ Your Money Briefing - What’s News in Markets: Oil Prices Surge, Bond Selloff, and Iran Fallout
Episode Date: March 7, 2026What do rising oil prices mean for the stock market? And why did foreign stocks fall so sharply this week? Plus, how did the war in the Middle East scramble the 60-40 portfolio? Host Hannah Erin Lang ...discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hey, listeners, your money briefing is on a break, but it will be back with more personal finance information for you in the future.
Until then, here's the news moving markets this week.
Hey, listeners, it's Saturday, March 7th.
I'm Hannah Aaron Lang for the Wall Street Journal.
And this is What's News and Markets, our look at the biggest moves of the week and the news that drove them.
So let's get into it.
This was a really rough week for markets.
Stocks declined this week, and they are now very much.
very solidly in the red this year.
Investors have a lot of negative headlines to contend with.
Of course, the biggest story is war in the Middle East.
A widening conflict that began when the United States attacked Iran this past Saturday
is threatening to send shockwaves across the global economy.
That would be a lot for Wall Street to digest on its own.
But let's not forget that markets didn't exactly start this past week on the strongest footing.
We've still had these lingering concerns about artificial intelligence.
investors spent a lot of last month worrying that AI could erase jobs or upend entire industries
in ways we might not be prepared for.
And to top it all off, Friday's job report was a lot worse than expected.
The U.S. economy lost 92,000 jobs.
One big fear among investors is that we could see stagflation take shape.
That's when economic growth stalls, but prices still rise,
which could also put the Federal Reserve in a tight spot when it comes to deciding whether to cut or hold interest rates.
Not great.
The Dow was down 3% this week, its worst week since the tariff turmoil that racked markets
last April.
The S&P 500 fell 2%, and the NASDAQ fell 1.2%.
One of the most important tickers to watch this week was the price of oil.
The war with Iran has forced a de facto closure of the Strait of Wormuz, a key shipping route
for global energy.
Benchmark U.S. crude futures surged roughly 36% this week to $90, $90,000.
and 90 cents a barrel. That was the largest one-week percent gain on record. Cost of diesel,
gasoline, and jet fuel have surged at paces that echo 2022 after Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
This is really bad news for investors. Rising oil prices push up consumer costs, but can also
cut into corporate profits, essentially threatening economic growth across the globe.
The consensus on this has evolved over the past week. On Monday, the stock has been
market reaction to the initial news of the U.S. attack was relatively muted.
Investors were betting the war would be brief and contained. But as that outlook has shifted,
so has their optimism that markets and the economy will emerge unscathed.
One of the most exciting parts about being a market supporter is that the markets are always changing.
A trend can change week to week or even day to day. A few weeks ago, I wrote a story about the
surprising outperformance of international equities this year and how, after you,
Years of being focused squarely on the U.S., American investors were starting to look abroad
because those stocks were doing better.
Yeah, not the case this past week.
Global equity indexes got pummeled, especially in Europe and Asia.
South Korea's Kaspi, which has been rocketing higher in 2026,
tumbled roughly 11% this week.
Germany's Dax slid 6.7% and pretty much every international stock benchmark end of the week in the red.
The reason for this, once again, has to do with oil.
The United States, which receives relatively few oil shipments from the Middle East,
is insulated from a global energy fallout in ways that other countries aren't.
This is one reason why U.S. energy stocks were some of the only stocks that rose in recent trading days.
Shares of American companies like Occidental Petroleum and Marathon Petroleum
were among the S&P 500's top performing on Friday, each rising roughly 1.8%.
And finally, I want to talk about bond yields.
The war in the Middle East has halted a weeks-long rally in U.S. government bonds,
pushing the yield on 10-year treasuries back above 4% this past week.
Bond yields rise when prices fall.
So this essentially means bond investors are selling.
That's not typical.
Stocks and bonds are supposed to work in opposite directions.
But the conflict in Iran has changed that.
Once again, it all comes back to oil.
Bond investors are worried about rising energy costs and higher inflation
that could erode the value of the asset.
And even Friday's disappointing job support,
something that would typically make ultra-safe treasuries look more attractive
wasn't enough to make traders change their tune.
Yields still ended the week above 4.1%,
logging their largest one-week gain since April.
That suggests bond traders, like so many other investors,
are still focused on the energy markets.
And now you know what's news in markets this week.
You can read about more stocks that move
on the week's news and our live markets coverage on WSJ.com.
Today's show was produced by Alexis Moore with supervising producer Jana Heron.
I'm Hannah Aaron Lang. Have a great weekend and see you next Saturday.
