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Oil Surge and Middle East Tensions Shake Markets — What Comes Next?

Markets are opening higher after a turbulent stretch that pushed U.S. stocks to their lowest levels of the year. While today’s bounce offers some relief, investors remain on edge as geopolitical tensions, rising oil prices, and uncertainty around artificial intelligence continue to drive volatility.

Jim Welsh, a writer at Macro Tides, joins Remy Blaire to share his insights on the current market environment and what investors should watch next.

Over the past two weeks, the biggest story impacting markets has been the escalating conflict involving Iran and the disruption of traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices sharply higher and raising concerns about inflation and global growth. In this conversation, we break down: why the S&P 500 may still face downside risk from a technical perspective, how rising oil prices could impact inflation and market volatility, why the Federal Reserve may remain on hold despite economic uncertainty, whether fears of stagflation are being overstated, why AI stocks could face additional downside over the next 6–12 months and growing concerns in the private credit market and what it means for financial stocks

We also discuss the broader economic backdrop, including steady GDP growth, strong fiscal spending, and how AI investment — expected to reach hundreds of billions of dollars — could impact the U.S. economy this year.

Finally, Jim explains why market breadth indicators like the advance-decline line suggest the current pullback could eventually lead to a short-term bottom before the next major move. However, with midterm election year volatility historically driving deeper corrections, investors should expect continued turbulence in the months ahead.

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