Oil
Prices Spike Over $110 a Barrel, Highest Since Pandemic
The jump
was a sign of growing concern that the war in the Middle East will take a toll
on energy supplies.
Rebecca
F. ElliottJoe Rennison
By
Rebecca F. Elliott and Joe Rennison
Published
March 8, 2026
Updated
March 9, 2026, 3:26 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/08/business/energy-environment/oil-100-dollars-barrel.html
Oil
prices surged on Monday well above $110 a barrel, in a sign of growing concern
that the war in the Middle East will continue to take a toll on energy
supplies.
It was
the first time in almost four years that the global oil benchmark, known as
Brent, cost more than $100 a barrel. Oil is now about 50 percent more expensive
than it was before the United States and Israel began attacking Iran on Feb.
28.
In Asia,
where economies are heavily dependent on imported oil from the Middle East,
stocks tumbled broadly, falling 6 percent in South Korea and 4 to 5 percent in
Japan.
Oil rose
as high as $115 to $120 a barrel. The price came down below $110 a barrel after
reports that governments were taking steps to ease concerns about tightening
supplies of oil.
President
Trump, who campaigned partly on lowering the cost of energy, said in a post on
Truth Social on Sunday described the higher oil prices as “short term” and said
they were “a very small price to pay for U.S.A., and World, Safety and Peace.”
The huge
jump in oil prices suggests that traders are increasingly worried about being
able to access oil and natural gas from the Persian Gulf. The Strait of Hormuz,
a waterway on Iran’s southern coast, has been all but closed for more than a
week, preventing fuel produced in the region from reaching overseas markets.
One-fifth of the world’s oil and substantial amounts of natural gas normally
move through the strait each day.
With
little sign that shipping will soon be able to return to normal, higher oil
prices will continue to drive up prices at the pump at a time when many
Americans are worried about the economy. As of Sunday, the price of a gallon of
regular gasoline had already climbed about 16 percent since the war started, to
a national average of $3.45, according to the AAA motor club. Diesel prices had
risen at a faster clip of around 22 percent.
Natural
gas, which is used to heat homes and generate electricity, has also become more
expensive, particularly in Europe and in Asia, which depend heavily on imported
fuel. Natural gas markets are more regional than oil markets, meaning that the
United States, as the world’s top natural gas producer, has been comparatively
insulated.
Earlier
on Sunday, Energy Secretary Chris Wright sought to play down the risk that
energy prices would remain high for a long time.
“You’re
seeing a little bit of fear premium in the marketplace, but the world is not
short of oil today or natural gas,” Mr. Wright told CNN. He said he expected
shipping through the strait to be disrupted for weeks in the worst-case
scenario, not months.
Mr. Trump
said last week that the U.S. Navy might escort tankers through the Strait of
Hormuz, but Mr. Wright said U.S. forces were focused on limiting Iran’s missile
and drone capabilities.
The
sudden increase in oil and gas prices has raised concerns about inflation. The
Federal Reserve typically counters rising prices by keeping interest rates
high, to slow the economy and the pace of inflation. But weak jobs data on
Friday bolstered the case for a rate cut, setting up a tug of war over the path
forward.
A measure
of investors’ inflation expectations has risen sharply. Investors now expect
inflation to rise to around 4.5 percent over the next 12 months, from a
forecast of 2.3 percent at the start of the year.
That has
helped push up government bond yields, which underpin borrowing costs for
companies and consumers. The two-year Treasury yield, which is sensitive to
changes in interest rate expectations, has risen roughly 0.2 percentage points
since the war began, to 3.56 percent.
Rebecca
F. Elliott covers energy for The Times.
Joe
Rennison writes about financial markets, a beat that ranges from chronicling
the vagaries of the stock market to explaining the often-inscrutable trading
decisions of Wall Street insiders.

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