Saturday, March 14, 2026
StockstToday.com Logo
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing
No Result
View All Result
StocksToday.com Logo
No Result
View All Result
Home Newsletter

From $100 Oil to a 0.7% Economy: The Week the Fed Lost Its Playbook

Stephanie Dugan by Stephanie Dugan
March 14, 2026
in Newsletter
0
From $100 Oil to a 0.7% Economy: The Week the Fed Lost Its Playbook
0
SHARES
7
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Dear readers,

On Thursday we wrote that the S&P 500’s composure rested on a foundation of macroeconomic data that was already stale—and that the equity market’s patience with a closed Strait of Hormuz had an expiration date. Two days later, patience has expired.

U.S. equities closed out their third consecutive week of losses on Friday, with the S&P 500 shedding 0.6% and the Nasdaq dropping 1.3%. But the weekly scoreboard barely captures the structural damage accumulating beneath the surface. The Strait of Hormuz, which we have been tracking since late February as it transformed from shipping lane to combat zone to declared blockade, has now effectively shut down. Goldman Sachs vessel tracking data shows daily oil flows through the strait collapsing from 19.5 million barrels to roughly 500,000—a 97% reduction that has no modern precedent.

Here is where things stand heading into the most consequential Fed meeting in years.


The Strait: From Tourniquet to Cardiac Arrest

Thursday we noted that the IEA’s 400-million-barrel strategic reserve release was a tourniquet, not a cure. The patient’s condition has since deteriorated. With the strait now functionally sealed, the IEA estimates a sustained daily disruption of 8 million barrels—roughly 20% of global oil and LNG shipments removed from the market in a matter of weeks.

Prices have pulled back from the panic-induced intraday spike to $111 earlier this month, but the new floor is punishing. WTI crude settled Friday at $98.71. Brent closed at $103.14. These are not spike prices. They are the new baseline.

The physical consequences are radiating outward. Drone strikes near Dubai’s main airport have thrown Gulf aviation into disarray. Halfway around the world, Cuba—already fragile—has seen unprecedented blackouts worsened by the oil squeeze spark rare anti-government riots. The crisis that began as a regional military conflict is now a global supply chain event.


Stagflation: No Longer a Thought Experiment

On Thursday we warned that no economy is immune to a sustained supply shock of this magnitude, and that the question was not whether the oil crisis would reach corporate earnings and consumer spending, but when. The answer arrived in Friday’s data.

Fourth-quarter 2025 GDP was revised down sharply to 0.7%—half the previously reported 1.4%. The February jobs report was worse: the U.S. economy unexpectedly shed 92,000 positions, pushing unemployment to 4.4%. Growth is stalling.

Yet inflation is accelerating in the opposite direction. Core PCE for January printed at 3.1% year-over-year—the Fed’s preferred gauge moving decisively the wrong way. The bond market’s verdict was immediate: the 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.28%, and futures traders have priced out any rate cut next week. The market now sees the first easing arriving no sooner than January 2027.

That is the stagflation trap in its purest form: an economy too weak to withstand tight policy, and an inflation picture too hot to justify loosening it. Jerome Powell walks into next week’s FOMC meeting with no good options and a labor market that is cracking in real time.


Big Tech’s AI Divergence Widens

While the macro picture darkens, the artificial intelligence trade is splitting cleanly into winners and losers—and the dividing line is who writes the checks versus who cashes them.

On the expenditure side, the bills are arriving. According to insider reports, Meta is preparing a significant round of layoffs, driven primarily by the need to free up capital for its ballooning AI infrastructure costs. The company that bet its identity on the metaverse is now discovering that the AI pivot carries its own crushing capital demands.

The hardware providers, meanwhile, are thriving on the other side of that equation. Oracle surged 9.18% on Wednesday to $163.12 after reporting a fiscal Q3 beat, powered by an 84% jump in cloud infrastructure revenue to $4.9 billion. The company has secured major contracts supplying cloud capacity to AI firms including OpenAI. Friday’s broader selloff pulled Oracle back to $156.55, but the underlying demand signal was unmistakable. Memory chipmakers Micron and SanDisk are seeing similar dynamics—analysts note that AI-driven demand has effectively booked out high-bandwidth memory supplies through 2026, creating scarcity-driven margin expansion that the broader market downturn has failed to dent.


Bitcoin’s Stress Test Gets Harder

On Thursday we highlighted Bitcoin’s quiet outperformance since the conflict escalated—a 7% gain while the S&P slipped and gold surprisingly declined. That resilience is being tested more severely now.

Bitcoin hovered near $70,874 heading into the weekend, having pulled back roughly 3.7% after the grim GDP revision, cooling from the $74,000 level it touched earlier this month when the oil shock first intensified. The retreat is notable but modest given the macro carnage surrounding it.

More telling than the spot price is the infrastructure story underneath. The stablecoin market cap has reached a new all-time high of $320 billion—a measure of liquidity staged and waiting for deployment. On the institutional front, rumors are circulating that Coinbase is exploring a strategic investment in offshore exchange giant Bybit, a move that would dramatically expand its global derivatives reach. Whether Bitcoin ultimately earns its safe-haven credentials in this crisis remains an open verdict, but capital continues to flow into the ecosystem even as traditional markets contract.


The Week Ahead: Powell’s Impossible Press Conference

Next week’s FOMC meeting is the main event, though not for the reason it usually is. With the probability of a rate cut sitting below 1%, the rate decision itself is settled. The real theater will be Jerome Powell’s press conference.

He faces a question that has no clean answer: How does the Federal Reserve communicate its intentions when the economy is simultaneously too weak and too inflationary for any single policy response? A dovish lean risks validating inflation expectations that are already drifting higher. A hawkish lean risks accelerating a labor market deterioration that is no longer hypothetical.

Thursday we wrote that the equity market was pricing yesterday’s economy while the energy complex was pricing next month’s. After this week’s data, those two timelines have converged—and neither picture is reassuring.

I hope you enjoy the rest of your weekend. We will be watching futures closely on Sunday evening.

Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial

Stephanie Dugan

Stephanie Dugan

Related Posts

400 Million Barrels, a $100 Handle, and the Market's Dangerous Calm
Newsletter

400 Million Barrels, a $100 Handle, and the Market’s Dangerous Calm

March 12, 2026
Sixteen Vessels, a $93 Handle, and the Physical Cost of the AI Boom
Newsletter

Sixteen Vessels, a $93 Handle, and the Physical Cost of the AI Boom

March 11, 2026
Triple Digits, a Late-Session Reversal, and AI's Quiet Trickle-Down
Newsletter

Triple Digits, a Late-Session Reversal, and AI’s Quiet Trickle-Down

March 10, 2026
Next Post
iShares Broad $ High Yield Corp Bond UCITS ETF USD (Dist) Stock

High-Yield Bond ETF Sees Massive Investor Exodus Amid Market Stress

Hochschild Mining Stock

Hochschild Mining Delivers Record Financial Performance in 2025

PyroGenesis Stock

Scaling Up: PyroGenesis Nears a Critical Industrial Inflection Point

Recommended

D-Wave Quantum Stock

D-Wave Quantum Shares: Investor Confidence Wanes Amid Strategic Pivot

2 months ago
Energy Vault Holdings Stock

Energy Vault Shares Maintain Impressive Growth Trajectory

5 months ago
BioNTech Stock

Political Storm Clouds Gather Over BioNTech’s Vaccine Business

6 months ago
SO stock news

Investors Anticipate NCS Multistage Holdings Quarterly Earnings Report

2 years ago

Categories

  • AI & Quantum Computing
  • Analysis
  • Analyst Ratings
  • Asian Markets
  • Automotive & E-Mobility
  • Banking & Insurance
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Bonds
  • Breaking News
  • Business & Industry Trends
  • Cannabis
  • Chemicals
  • Commodities
  • Consumer & Luxury
  • Crypto Stocks
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Cyber Security
  • DAX
  • Defense & Aerospace
  • Dividends
  • Dow Jones
  • E-Commerce
  • Earnings
  • Emerging Markets
  • Energy & Oil
  • ETF
  • Ethereum & Altcoins
  • European Markets
  • Forex
  • Gaming & Metaverse
  • Gold & Precious Metals
  • Healthcare
  • Hydrogen
  • Index
  • Industrial
  • Insider Trading
  • IPOs
  • Market Commentary
  • Market News
  • MDAX & SDAX
  • Mergers & Acquisitions
  • Nasdaq
  • Newsletter
  • Penny Stocks
  • Pharma & Biotech
  • Real Estate & REITs
  • Renewable Energy
  • S&P 500
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Stock Picks
  • Stock Targets
  • Stocks
  • TecDAX
  • Tech & Software
  • Telecommunications
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Turnaround
  • Uncategorized
  • Value & Growth

Topics

Adobe Alibaba Alphabet Amazon AMD Apple ASML BioNTech Bitcoin Bloom Energy Broadcom Coinbase D-Wave Quantum Eli Lilly Fiserv IBM Intel Kraft Heinz Marvell Technology META Micron Microsoft MP Materials MSCI World ETF Newmont Mining NIO Novo Nordisk Nvidia Ocugen Opendoor Oracle Palantir PayPal Plug Power QuantumScape Robinhood Rocket Lab USA Salesforce Strategy Synopsys Tesla Tilray Unitedhealth Uranium Energy Viking Therapeutics
No Result
View All Result

Highlights

Institutional Investors Rebalance Holdings in Ubtech Robotics Shares

Nintendo Shares Surge on Pokémon Success and Legal Windfall

Wacker Chemie’s Strategic Response to Mounting Cost Pressures

TotalEnergies Stock: Production Cuts Offset by Surging Oil Prices

Nvidia’s GTC 2026 Conference: A Pivotal Moment for AI Leadership

D-Wave Quantum Navigates a Crossroads of Growth and Scrutiny

Trending

Nordex Stock
Analysis

Nordex Shares Surge on Strong Order Momentum

by Rodolfo Hanigan
March 14, 2026
0

The Hamburg-based wind turbine manufacturer has reinforced its market standing by securing two major contracts within a...

Valneva Stock

Valneva’s Stock Awaits Two Critical Catalysts

March 14, 2026
Nokia Stock

Nokia’s AI-Driven Strategy Fuels Stock Surge and Market Confidence

March 14, 2026
Ubtech Robotics Stock

Institutional Investors Rebalance Holdings in Ubtech Robotics Shares

March 14, 2026
Nintendo Stock

Nintendo Shares Surge on Pokémon Success and Legal Windfall

March 14, 2026

StocksToday.com is your one-stop destination for the latest stock news and analysis. We provide in-depth coverage of the stock market, including market news, company news, sector news, IPO news, investment strategies, personal finance, international markets, and more.

Follow us on social media:

Recent News

  • Nordex Shares Surge on Strong Order Momentum
  • Valneva’s Stock Awaits Two Critical Catalysts
  • Nokia’s AI-Driven Strategy Fuels Stock Surge and Market Confidence

Category

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Imprint
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service

© 2023 StocksToday.com

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Tech & Software
  • Earnings
  • Analysis
  • Trading & Momentum
  • Cryptocurrency
  • Banking & Insurance
  • AI & Quantum Computing

© 2023 StocksToday.com