Key Takeaways
-Oil prices have eased from their Iran-war highs, partially relieving inflation pressures.
-Gasoline reacts first, but core inflation and goods costs adjust more slowly, delaying full impact.
-Fed Chair Kevin Warsh speaks this week, with markets reassessing rate-hike expectations.
-US Non-Farm Employment data may influence USDX, gold, S&P 500, and Bitcoin moves.
-Traders are monitoring Brent and WTI price ranges as well as inflation signals for market direction.
Oil has given markets the first clear signal that the inflation shock from the Iran conflict is gradually fading. Brent crude, which traded above $113 during the peak of the war, has retreated closer to $74, while WTI sits near $70.
Although the decline eases some inflationary pressures, traders should note that price adjustments for gasoline and transport costs lag behind crude movements, with core inflation taking the longest to respond.
Consumers may notice some relief before it appears in official CPI or PCE data. Diesel and freight cost adjustments impact business operations with a lag of several weeks, while core inflation reflects sticky costs such as rent, healthcare, and services.
As a result, the Federal Reserve is likely to adopt a patient stance, weighing incoming data rather than relying solely on past oil movements.
What Traders Are Watching?
Traders are focused on whether lower oil prices and easing fuel costs will translate into slower inflation and shift Fed policy expectations.
Core PCE remains the pivotal measure, with a hotter reading likely to sustain the Fed’s higher-for-longer stance and strengthen the US dollar, pressuring gold and risk assets. A softer outcome could reduce rate-hike expectations, potentially supporting equities, Bitcoin, and gold.
The “peace window” in energy markets is also under scrutiny. Traders are monitoring whether the ceasefire in Iran holds, shipping and tanker flows remain stable, and oil prices maintain key levels.
Brent below $75 and WTI near $70 would support a disinflation narrative, while any return of conflict risk could quickly rebuild the war-risk premium.
Technical Analysis & Key Levels
USOil continues to trade below key short-term moving averages, reflecting ongoing bearish pressure after the sharp drop. Brent is testing support near $70–$71, while resistance sits at $75.80 and $77.80.