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Brent crude futures top $100 a barrel before falling back

While it is uncertain how long the turbulence will last, some analysts are tempering expectations of monetary easing.

Markets hate uncertainty and since the U.S. and Israel launched the first wave of attacks on Feb. 28, that's what the war in Iran has given them. From energy to supposed havens, Barron's lays bare the economic fallout from the conflict through the following five charts

The Iran crisis has reignited fears of an energy supply squeeze and inflation shock in Europe, just as the continent hoped it had tamed inflation. Prolonged supply disruptions could lift eurozone inflation modestly and put BoE and ECB rate cuts on hold.

The energy shock has hit markets in Europe and Asia, but their growth drivers are intact. Where to find bargains.

With the US oil prices printing a new high of nearly $120 before retreating this week, Wall Street is on high alert. The escalating US-Iran war has sparked fears that a spike in energy prices will trigger a significant stock market correction or even a full-blown bear market.

Fink also addressed whether woke corporate initiatives were a failed experiment for BlackRock.

JGBs fell in price terms in the morning Tokyo session amid inflation concerns spurred by rising oil prices.

Oil, Oil, Oil. A month ago, the latest inflation report might have spurred a stock-market rally. The consumer price index showed prices rose 2.4% in February, roughly in line with estimates and matching January's pace.

Sure, a war is happening in the Middle East – but that wasn't the only reason, On The Money has learned.

CNBC's Jim Cramer is warning against trying to ignore the Iran war because rising oil prices could eventually overwhelm even the best stock ideas. Still, the "Mad Money" host said investors could look to AI data centers, memory chips, and discount retailers if oil prices stabilize.

Oil is used worldwide as a transportation fuel and as a source of chemicals and other products. Volatile oil prices dramatically increase uncertainty.

Wednesday's stock market action might have felt a tad dull for observers and investors.
@CharlesSchwab's Nathan Peterson weighs how geopolitical and crude oil volatility hit Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. However, as he explains it, crypto has shown surprising resilience.

Schwab's Liz Ann Sonders joins 'Closing Bell Overtime' to talk the upturn in the markets after a volatile week.

Roger Ferguson, former Federal Reserve vice chair, joins 'Closing Bell' to discuss what to expect from the Federal Reserve next week, the sentiment among the Fed and much more.

When asked about the market outlook heading into mid-March, Wall Street veteran Marc Chaikin said current conditions appear to be unfolding much like the prediction he outlined a year ago.

The immediate obstacle isn't opposition to Warsh himself. Instead it is an investigation into current Fed Chair Jerome Powell that has created a procedural standoff inside the Senate Banking Committee.

Brent crude prices rise on news of mines in the Strait of Hormuz and reports that nearby cargo ships were struck.

Energy markets are tense as the IEA moves toward a record oil release amid Middle East risks. Marley Kayden and Sam Vadas warn February's 2.4% CPI misses the impact of surging crude, while focus shifts to retail earnings from Dollar General (DG) and DICK'S Sporting Goods (DKS) alongside key economic data.