What $100+ Crude Means for Growth, Inflation, Recession Risk — Evening Brief – 03.09.26
U.S. WTI oil prices spiked to nearly $120 a barrel over the weekend, marking the first trip back into triple‑digit territory in four years, before sliding sharply to $94 on Monday. The move sharpened focus on whether another energy shock could derail the expansion—or simply dent it.
The U.S. is better positioned than in past oil crises. Domestic production has climbed enough to make America the world’s largest oil producer and a net petroleum exporter, while decades of efficiency gains mean the economy now uses less oil per unit of growth. That buffers the hit, but it doesn’t eliminate it. Crude is still priced in a global market, and the latest jump is landing just as central banks are trying to steer a narrow path on inflation.
The core macro risk is stagflation: higher inflation paired with slower growth. If the conflict driving the price spike drags on, the trade‑offs get tougher. Raising rates can lean against inflation but risks choking off growth when energy costs are already biting. Cutting or pausing too soon could keep inflation elevated for longer.
For now, market‑based inflation expectations implied by Treasuries remain in the mid‑2% range, broadly consistent with the last several years, and high‑frequency gauges like the Dallas Fed’s Weekly Economic Index are still pointing to solid activity.
The bigger concern is path‑dependence: the longer oil stays elevated and the conflict persists, the more likely it is that today’s manageable shock evolves into something that leaves deeper economic scars. Prediction market Polymarket currently estimates the probability of a U.S. recession in 2026 at about 32%, up roughly 10 percentage points since the conflict began, suggesting investors remain cautious even as growth continues.


