Oil Price Surges Above $100, Yield Curve Inverts: U.S. Bonds Have Already Told the Market What Is Coming
Since the closure of the Strait of Hormuz on March 2, around 17.8 million barrels per day of global oil flow has been disrupted. In the month of March, Brent surged by nearly 60% and WTI by about 53%. This is the steepest monthly gain for the Brent contract since its inception in 1988, surpassing the 46% record set during the Gulf War in 1990.
Normally, a sharp rise in oil prices would push up inflation expectations, and bond yields should follow suit. For most of the past two decades, oil prices and 10-year U.S. Treasury yields have indeed been positively correlated. However, this time, they moved in the opposite direction.

In the first three weeks of March, both were still moving up in tandem. WTI rose from $67 to $100, and the 10-year yield climbed from 4.15% to 4.44%. The turning point occurred between March 27 and 30: while oil prices continued to soar, the yield plummeted from 4.44% to 3.92% in three trading days, a 52 basis point drop breaching the psychologically important 4% level.
This was a typical "flight-to-safety" move, with the bond market making a judgment call: the risks to growth have outweighed the risks of inflation. In the words of the economic research firm Oxford Economics, "risks to economic growth are starting to outweigh risks to inflation." In other words, the market is not no longer afraid of inflation but is more afraid of a recession.
This kind of decoupling is not common, but whenever it occurs, the subsequent story is not usually a good one.

There have been five instances in the past half-century where oil prices surged by over 35% in a short period. In 1973, following the oil embargo, the U.S. GDP fell by 4.7%. In 1979, after the Iranian Revolution, global GDP deviated from trend growth by 3 percentage points. In 1990, during the Gulf War, the U.S. briefly entered a recession. In 2008, oil prices peaked at $147, and although the main cause of that recession was the financial crisis, the oil price shock accelerated the economic downturn. The only exception was the oil price surge driven by the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022, which did not trigger a recession but came with the cost of the most severe inflation in 40 years.
The surge in March 2026 exceeds all of the aforementioned cases. According to research by Federal Reserve economist James Hamilton, there is no mechanical link between oil price shocks and recessions, but "the greater the net rise in oil prices, the more pronounced the restraint on consumption and investment." Goldman Sachs has raised the U.S. recession probability to 30%, while the consulting firm EY-Parthenon puts it at 40%.
The market's reaction speed is also remarkably fast.

At the beginning of March, CME FedWatch indicated the market expected three interest rate cuts throughout the year, with a 70% probability of a cut in June. Then, oil prices kept rising, with the U.S. import price index jumping 1.3% on March 26, and Federal Reserve Chair nominee Kevin Warsh suggesting the neutral interest rate might be higher. On that day, the probability of a rate hike within the year surged to 52%, and the 10-year yield touched 4.35%. FinancialContent defined this day as "The Great Hawkish Pivot."
Four days later, the narrative completely flipped. On March 30, consumer confidence data plunged significantly, manufacturing unexpectedly contracted, and the 10-year yield plummeted to 3.92%. According to FinancialContent, the market's bet on the Fed's dovish turn in May rose to 65%. Goldman Sachs said the market had bet against a rate hike. Powell, speaking to undergraduates at Harvard University that day, said the Fed "has not yet reached the point where it needs to decide whether to look through the war shock," but emphasized that "anchoring of inflation expectations is key."
According to Axios, Powell's statement was interpreted by the market as follows: the Fed neither wants to hike rates to fight inflation nor is in a hurry to cut rates to aid the economy but is waiting to see if this supply shock is temporary or persistent. However, the bond market couldn't wait.
If history is any guide, Citi strategist McCormick put it most bluntly: stagflation lies ahead, bad for bonds, bad for stocks.

The era of high inflation from 1973 to 1982 provides an asset performance report. Gold's real annualized return was +9.2%, the S&P GSCI commodity index surged 586% over ten years, and real estate returned +4.5%. In contrast, the S&P 500 had a real annualized return of -2%, and long-term government bonds were at -3%. According to NYU Stern historical data, in 1979 alone, long-term government bonds suffered a loss as high as -8.6%.
A traditional 60/40 investment portfolio (60% stocks + 40% bonds) was crushed during stagflation. The only assets that could outpace inflation were tangible assets. Natixis predicts an April Brent average price of $125, with a "credible peak" reaching $150. Goldman Sachs, with a slightly milder outlook, forecasts an April average price of $115 but assumes the Houthis will restore navigation through the Strait of Hormuz within six weeks, falling back to $80 by the year-end.
The bond market has already made a one-time choice for everyone, betting on a recession over inflation.
You may also like

Morning News | Nasdaq will eliminate the 10% minimum float requirement next month; OpenFX completes $94 million financing; Coinbase establishes "Next Bets" internal venture capital program

A Detailed Explanation of Hyperliquid HIP-4: Infiltrating Traditional Finance through Prediction Markets and Options Trading
WEEX Poker Party: The First-Ever Crypto Trading Card Game—Trade, Play, and Win Real Rewards
Join WEEX Poker Party, the first interactive crypto trading card game. Trade to earn cards, trigger lucky buffs, build winning poker hands, and claim daily rewards from April 1–30, 2026. Start playing now!

Hong Kong dollar stablecoin does not need to become USDC

Chain games are defeated by reality, Web3 does not believe in dreams

Interpreting Aave V4: A Transformation from Product to "Bank"

Report on the Current Status of AI Payment Agreement Research: A New Paradigm of Payment in the Agent Economy

Really Can't Be Too Optimistic? Two Quantum Computing Papers on the Same Day Lower Bitcoin's Breakeven Barrier by Two Orders of Magnitude

Event Update | 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Carnival Peripheral Events Overview

Pentagon's Broker | Rewire News Evening Brief
Global Crypto Tax Trends in 2026: From Bitcoin ETFs to DeFi Compliance
Bitcoin's 2025 peak of $126K is gone, but your tax bill isn't. New IRS Form 1099-DA means no hiding trades. Discover 3 legal strategies to reduce liabilities and use WEEX's free tax tool to automate reporting.

Airdrops cannot make you rich, edgeX does not need a community

Artificial intelligence agents are about to take away Visa's market share
2026 Crypto Tax Rules: How Bitcoin Price Changes Affect Your Filing
BTC trades around $67,500 today. If you sold near $126,000 last year, you still owe tax on those gains, regardless of where the price is now. Here's what every trader needs to know this tax season.

OpenClaw 3.28 Update: Potential Security Risks with Axios
Key Takeaways Recent findings suggest OpenClaw version 3.28 may contain a compromised version of the Axios library. Dependency…

Steakhouse Financial Experiences Phishing Attack: A Comprehensive Overview
Key Takeaways Steakhouse Financial’s domain experienced a phishing attack, prompting user safety advisories. Depositors’ funds and smart contracts…

DeFi Risk Management in Turmoil: Gauntlet’s Bold Move Amidst Resolv Exploit
Key Takeaways Gauntlet, a leading DeFi risk manager, is engaging in full recovery efforts after Resolv Labs’ exploit.…

FTX/Alameda Wallet Transfers Over $8 Million in ZRO Tokens to Wintermute
Key Takeaways An FTX/Alameda-associated wallet moved 4.126 million ZRO tokens to market maker Wintermute, with an approximate value…
Morning News | Nasdaq will eliminate the 10% minimum float requirement next month; OpenFX completes $94 million financing; Coinbase establishes "Next Bets" internal venture capital program
A Detailed Explanation of Hyperliquid HIP-4: Infiltrating Traditional Finance through Prediction Markets and Options Trading
WEEX Poker Party: The First-Ever Crypto Trading Card Game—Trade, Play, and Win Real Rewards
Join WEEX Poker Party, the first interactive crypto trading card game. Trade to earn cards, trigger lucky buffs, build winning poker hands, and claim daily rewards from April 1–30, 2026. Start playing now!
