Treasuries: Oil Shock Reignites Inflation Fears
Key Takeaways
- WTI crude surged 41% to $94.65 in ten days after Iran's Strait of Hormuz closure disrupted 20% of global oil supply.
- The 10-year Treasury yield rose 15 basis points to 4.12% as 5-year breakeven inflation jumped from 2.40% to 2.53%.
- The IEA announced a record 400-million-barrel strategic reserve release on March 11 to cap energy prices.
- The Fed's easing cycle from 4.33% to 3.64% is likely paused as oil-driven inflation complicates the rate cut path.
- Duration risk is elevated — short-duration Treasuries and TIPS offer better risk-adjusted positioning while oil volatility persists.
The Yield Landscape: Energy-Driven Repricing
Treasury yields have moved sharply higher across the curve since the Iran conflict began on February 28. The 10-year note climbed from 3.97% on February 27 to 4.12% by March 9, while the 2-year rose from 3.38% to 3.56% and the 30-year from 4.64% to 4.72%.
The 2-year's 18-basis-point jump is notable — it reflects front-end repricing of Fed policy expectations as traders walk back rate cut bets. The 10-year/2-year spread has narrowed slightly from 0.59% to 0.56%, suggesting the curve flattening that typically accompanies inflation scares. The long end has been relatively anchored, with the 30-year adding just 8 basis points, as flight-to-safety flows partially offset inflation selling.
Treasury Yields: Feb 20 – Mar 9
The average interest rate on total marketable U.S. debt stands at 3.355% as of February 28, according to Treasury Department data. With the government rolling over trillions in maturing debt at current rates, every basis point higher adds billions to annual interest costs — a fiscal pressure that compounds the inflation problem.
Oil's Transmission to Inflation Expectations
The speed of the oil price move has been extraordinary. WTI crude jumped from $66.96 on February 27 to $94.65 on March 9 — a 41% surge. Brent followed a similar trajectory, rising from $71.32 to $94.35 over the same period. The national average gasoline price has already climbed to $3.50 per gallon from $2.94 just two weeks earlier.
Oil Price Surge: WTI vs Brent
The Fed's Dilemma: Cut or Hold?
IEA Intervention and Supply Outlook
The International Energy Agency's March 11 decision to release 400 million barrels from strategic reserves is the largest coordinated intervention in the organization's 50-year history — more than double the 182 million barrels released during the 2022 Ukraine crisis. IEA members currently hold over 1.2 billion barrels of public emergency stocks, with an additional 600 million barrels in industry reserves held under government obligation.
The sheer scale of the commitment reflects the severity of the Strait of Hormuz disruption. Approximately 20% of global oil and gas supplies transit the waterway, and Iran's threats to attack shipping have effectively closed it since the conflict began on February 28.
For the Treasury market, the reserve release is a double-edged sword. If it succeeds in capping oil below $100, it could stabilize inflation expectations and allow the bond selloff to moderate. But it depletes strategic reserves at a time of genuine geopolitical risk, and the IEA has not set a specific timeline for when barrels will reach the market. Previous reserve releases have had mixed track records — the 2022 release temporarily capped prices but did not prevent a sustained period of elevated energy costs.
The key variable is duration. A short conflict that reopens the Strait would render the reserve release precautionary. A prolonged closure would mean 400 million barrels is a bridge, not a solution — and Treasury yields would continue to price in a more inflationary environment.
Investor Outlook: Positioning for Uncertainty
Conclusion
The Iran conflict has injected a supply-side inflation shock into a Treasury market that was pricing in a smooth easing cycle. With WTI crude at $94.65, gasoline at $3.50, and 5-year breakevens jumping to 2.53%, the bond market is being forced to reconsider the disinflationary trajectory that had supported the Fed's rate cuts from 4.33% to 3.64%.
The IEA's record 400-million-barrel reserve release is the biggest policy response available short of ending the conflict itself. Its success or failure will determine whether the 10-year yield stabilizes near 4.12% or pushes toward the 4.50% level that would signal a more fundamental repricing of inflation risk. For now, the Treasury market is caught between safe-haven demand and inflation fear — and oil is the tiebreaker.
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Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Consult qualified professionals before making investment decisions.