Charting the global economy: Oil prices top $90 on Iran war
US oil prices surged to record weekly gains as the war in Iran disrupted critical energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Goldman Sachs warned of oil topping $100 a barrel, potentially fueling inflation amid a weakening US labor market and risi...

The next four weeks will determine whether Europe’s economy is facing a fresh crisis or simply a speed bump in its recovery.
With no sign of a let-up in hostilities, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. flagged the risk of scenarios for oil topping $100 a barrel in the case of prolonged disruption. That threatens to boost inflation, just as the Federal Reserve is now contending with a shakier labor market than previously thought.
Here are some of the charts that appeared on Bloomberg this week on the latest developments in the global economy, markets and geopolitics:
World

US President Donald Trump demanded Iran surrender as the war on the Islamic Republic raged for a seventh day, with the impact reverberating across global supply chains and energy markets. US crude futures hit $90 a barrel and Brent crude neared $95 a barrel for the first time in almost two years during the session, with traders warning $100 could be on the horizon sooner rather than later.
US

An unexpected hiring slump threatens to upend the prevailing view among Federal Reserve policymakers that a stabilizing labor market will allow them to keep interest rates steady as they fight persistent inflation. A decline of 92,000 February payrolls, along with an increase in the unemployment rate to 4.4%, has stoked warnings by economists of a stagflationary cycle as a widening war in the Middle East causes oil prices surge.

Manufacturing expanded in February but input prices soared at the fastest pace since 2022, stoking fears of an inflation resurgence even before this weekend’s attacks on Iran. The assortment of recent price data along with geopolitics point to a steady undercurrent of inflation for US producers, which is being partially fed by higher import duties from the Trump administration.
Europe


Euro-area inflation unexpectedly quickened, backing the ECB’s caution on interest rates, particularly as the war in Iran sends energy prices surging. Core inflation, excluding volatile food and energy costs, also surprised economists by accelerating to 2.4%.

A sense of panic is spreading among Asian oil and fuel buyers as the war in the Middle East chokes access to everything from crude to refined fuels and feedstock used to produce petrochemicals. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz is already prompting some Asian countries to prioritize domestic needs, cutting exports and tightening regional supplies.


China set its most modest growth target since 1991, a tacit acknowledgment that the model powering the country’s economic rise is showing strains.
Emerging Markets


Already burdened by Washington’s efforts to blunt Chinese influence and reassert dominion over the Americas, energy importing nations like Chile and smaller countries like the Dominican Republic are now vulnerable to sudden oil price spikes thanks to the war in Iran.
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