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Coinpaper 2026-03-20 18:10:45

Brent Crude Oil Price: Why Oil Refuses to Fall Below $110

Brent crude is still holding in triple digits, with the benchmark trading around $110.7 on March 20 after touching $110 earlier in the session. That leaves the oil market in a high-alert mode, even after some of the panic buying from the sharpest phase of the Iran-driven rally faded. The key point is simple: Brent has not returned to the pre-conflict price zone, and traders are still pricing in a meaningful geopolitical risk premium. The latest move comes after a month in which crude has risen more than 46%, driven by Middle East tensions and repeated fears around the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow shipping lane that handles roughly a fifth of global oil flows. Reuters reported earlier this month that Brent spiked as high as $111.04 intraday on March 8 as the war escalated, while WTI also surged past $111. Even when prices pull back, they remain historically elevated because the market still worries about fresh disruptions. Why the Oil Premium Has Not Gone Away The strongest reason Brent is still so elevated is that the market does not see the conflict as fully resolved. UBS said in early March that a prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz could push Brent above $100, and attacks on regional energy infrastructure could support prices even higher. Later in the month, Brent held near $108.5 even after some intraday easing, showing that traders continue to pay up for supply security. Another factor is that supply uncertainty is no longer just theoretical. Reuters reported that investors and U.S. crude producers rushed to lock in high prices as volatility surged, a classic sign that the market expects more turbulence ahead. When producers hedge aggressively and buyers scramble for barrels, the market is telling you that a high-price environment may last longer than a few sessions.​ What This Means for Stocks and Inflation A Brent price above $110 is not just an energy story. It matters for inflation, interest rates, transport costs, and consumer sentiment. Higher crude tends to feed into gasoline and diesel prices, which then pressure airlines, shipping firms, and industrial companies. It also complicates the outlook for central banks, because energy-driven inflation can stay sticky even if the broader economy slows. That is why traders have been treating Brent like a macro risk asset. When oil jumps, stocks usually wobble, bond yields can rise, and safe-haven flows strengthen. The market is effectively asking how long consumers and businesses can absorb a world where energy costs are still this high.

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