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Morning Bid: Better fill the car up, like right now

By Thomson Reuters Mar 9, 2026 | 12:35 AM

March 9 (Reuters) – A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Wayne Cole.

OK, so this is shaping up as a proper global energy shock, like the 1970’s version. Though it is unique in being by ​choice, or at least the choice of one man.

Brent cleared $100 at the open ‌and never looked back, reaching a top of $119.50 so far. The crude benchmark is currently up 25%, which would be the biggest daily rise on record if it holds, and brings its gains since President Trump ordered the attack on Iran to a thumping 60%.

Those are the sort of numbers that are typically associated ‌with ​world recession. The globe is less oil intensive these days, ⁠and there are some other ⁠sources of crude, but analysts agree it is not enough to weather a prolonged conflict.

And it does look like being lengthy. Trump’s call for “unconditional surrender” and Iran’s choice of the son of the former hard-line supreme leader as the new hard-line supreme leader ​would seem to make it hard for either side to back down.

A glance at shipping tracker Marine Traffic shows tankers are not braving the Strait of Hormuz and, given ⁠the way Iran is flinging ordinance around, might not ⁠even if war insurance was available and affordable. With crude not flowing, ​some Gulf states are running out of storage and scaling back production, which is a lengthy ​process to resume.

That’s showing up all-too quickly in fuel prices. Around half ‌of Europe’s jet fuel comes through the strait, sending prices to record highs equivalent to about $190 per barrel.

Airline stocks across Asia were hammered on Monday, though you might not have noticed amid the general carnage. The Nikkei is off around 7%, South Korea 8% and Taiwan 5%. ⁠European share futures are down anywhere form 1% to 3%, and Wall Street futures around 2%.

Bond yields are up globally as investors hedge the risk of accelerating inflation, and how that might ⁠constrain central banks from easing ‌policy even should economic activity slow.

Spiking prices for liquefied natural gas, ⁠jet fuel and fertiliser are all set to make it ​costlier to, ‌say, heat homes, take a holiday or buy food.

For U.S. consumers, ​the real ⁠sore spot is always petrol – it’s a liquid not a gas. Wait until prices at the pump rise 10%, 20% or more, the resulting howl of pain could prove loud enough to end a war.

Key developments that could influence markets on Monday:

(By Wayne Cole; ​Editing by Christopher Cushing)