Oil’s Push Toward $100 Increases Risks For Stocks And Credit Markets

Rising gasoline costs threaten to reignite inflation and widen credit spreads, signaling a potential recessionary shift.

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The S&P 500 dropped more than 1% on Friday as oil prices surged and the job report came in well below estimates. Oil climbed over $91 on Friday, and IG Weekend Oil is trading up almost 6%, indicating an opening around $95. Meanwhile, the weekend Nasdaq 100 proxy is trading lower by about 70 basis points. It is common to see futures on Sunday night open near the indicated weekend levels, which helps in understanding where and why future prices are moving higher or lower.

An open around $95 for oil would place it at its next level of resistance and its highest price since September 2023. After $95, things in oil get more interesting because resistance levels thin out, and we could easily see oil surge into the $100 to $110 range. Even though oil is technically overextended, with an RSI over 70 and trading well above its upper Bollinger Band, technicals currently take a back seat as the commodity reprices in our new world environment.

Of course, gasoline prices are also rising, and that becomes more significant given the current resistance at $2.60, followed by $2.81 and then $3.00. Rising gasoline and oil prices will not help the inflation outlook, and this week, inflation will be in focus, with both the February CPI and January PCE reports being released. For the most part, the CPI energy index simply follows the price of gasoline, so one can expect that while February energy data may not be affected much of the rise in oil and gasoline, March likely will. Gasoline alone has nearly a 3% weighting in the headline CPI report.

Rising commodity prices are likely to put upward pressure on interest rates until the price is deemed too high and damaging to the economy. Once that happens, rates will no longer rise and will begin to fall. That, in my view, will be the market’s recession warning.

Interestingly, when you invert the HYG ETF and overlay it with RBOB gasoline, it shows a clear relationship between the two as well. Rising gasoline and oil prices will, in essence, not only drag the HYG ETF lower but will also likely lead to considerably wider credit spreads.

In the end, high-yield credit trades like equity, so if high-yield credit continues to feel pressured due to rising oil and gasoline prices, it will be hard for stocks to hold their current levels, whether it’s the S&P 500 or the Russell 2000.

We will just have to wait to see where this ultimately goes and where oil and gasoline settle out; right now, it is just not entirely clear.

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