Trading day: Oil and yields up, up, and away
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 11, 2026
4 min readLast updated: March 11, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on March 11, 2026
4 min readLast updated: March 11, 2026
On March 11, 2026, oil prices surged after the IEA agreed to release a record 400 million barrels from strategic reserves, pushing two‑year U.S. Treasury yields to their highest level since September, exacerbating inflation concerns and weighing on equities.
ORLANDO, Florida, March 11 (Reuters) - Oil prices rose sharply on Wednesday despite a record release of global crude reserves, stoking inflation fears and lifting two-year Treasury yields to the highest since September. The weight on stocks was too much, and Wall Street ended mostly lower.
In my column today I sketch out why structurally higher oil prices are bad news for U.S. corporate earnings, as businesses and consumers face far higher direct and indirect energy costs than they were budgeting for.
If you have more time to read, here are a few articles I recommend to help you make sense of what happened in markets today.
Worries about the health of the $2 trillion private credit market continue to deepen. The latest red flags: JPMorgan reducing the value of some loans to private credit funds, and reports of Cliffwater's flagship private credit fund capping redemptions.
Scarce or nonexistent liquidity, opaque pricing, limited transparency and spiking redemptions - this is how investors are increasingly viewing the sector. That may not be a wholly fair assessment, but right now the bar to convincing them otherwise is getting higher.
Oil prices spiked 5% on Wednesday, the same day the International Energy Agency agreed to release 400 million barrels of reserves in response to the crisis, the largest such move in its history.
You can look at oil's reaction in two ways. It was equivalent to 'buy the rumor, sell the fact', as crude plunged the day before when this move was flagged. Or, it shows supply fears run much deeper than thought, and we are in for a sustained period of significantly higher prices.
The Japanese yen is weakening rapidly, and is now within sight of 160 per dollar. It's at levels that prompted the New York Fed to 'check rates' in dollar/yen in January, seen as a warning of potential joint U.S.-Japanese intervention to support the yen.
Tokyo is in a bind though. Safe-haven demand is driving the dollar higher across the board, and yen sentiment is particularly bearish because Japan imports 95% of its energy, which is now much more expensive. Would intervention be warranted if the 'fundamentals' justify a weaker yen?
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Opinions expressed are those of the author. They do not reflect the views of Reuters News, which, under the Trust Principles, is committed to integrity, independence, and freedom from bias.
(Reporting by Jamie McGeever; Editing by Bill Berkrot)
Oil prices spiked 5% even after a record release of global crude reserves, as market concerns over supply shortages outweighed temporary relief measures.
Structurally higher oil prices increase both direct and indirect energy costs for businesses and consumers, negatively affecting US corporate earnings.
The private credit market faces stress due to JPMorgan marking down loan values, reports of capped redemptions, and concerns over liquidity, pricing transparency, and rising redemptions.
The yen's rapid decline toward 160 per dollar raises the risk of intervention, as Japan's high energy import costs make a weaker yen particularly problematic amid surging oil prices.
Key events include Middle East developments, inflation data from India and Brazil, trade figures from Canada and the US, central bank meetings, and US jobless claims.
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