Sabtu, 28 Maret 2026

How Smart Investors React to $100 Oil

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The Oxford Club Special Opportunities

How Smart Investors React to $100 Oil

Marc Lichtenfeld, Chief Income Strategist, The Oxford Club

Energy has been the story in the markets for at least the past year.

Prior to the war in the Middle East, when investors talked about the energy sector, it was in relation to how it would feed AI.

But now the main topic on everyone's mind when it comes to energy is the surge in oil prices.

On February 20, I told readers in my Technical Pattern Profits VIP Trading Service that if oil got above $65, it was likely going to $80 quickly - and after it reached $80, I said it would go on to $95.

Just 17 days after my initial prediction, it crossed $100.

There have only been three other times in the past 44 years that oil has spiked above $100 per barrel. It happened in 2008, from 2011 to 2014, and in 2022 coming out of the pandemic.

That obviously causes pain at the pump and raises inflation, as everything gets more costly to ship.

But what does it mean for stocks?

Let's look at five previous periods when oil spiked.

In 1990, when Iraq invaded Kuwait, oil prices quickly doubled from around $20 per barrel to more than $40. You can see that during that move in oil, the S&P 500 had a nearly identical inverse reaction.

SWTIC - Light Crude Oil - Spot (EOD) CME
 

Nine years later, as the dot-com boom was entering its final phase, oil surged from about $10 per barrel to nearly $40 a year and a half later.

Interestingly, as oil rose, the S&P - caught in the final throes of dot-com mania - did not slide immediately. In fact, it continued to rise even though the rally was clearly running out of gas (pun intended).

Then, just as oil peaked, the market began its plummet.

SWTIC - Light Crude Oil - Spot (EOD) CME
 

$100 Oil

The first time oil broke above $100 was January 2, 2008.

Like we saw during the dot-com boom, as oil began its rise, the market didn't drop immediately. But that $100 level proved too much. In conjunction with the global financial crisis, the market melted down. Oil ascending to $145 put additional pressure on stocks.

SWTIC - Light Crude Oil - Spot (EOD) CME
 

The global recession brought oil prices back in check, but they quickly began surging again when the Arab Spring uprisings began in December 2010. Oil bounced around between roughly $75 and $110 for the next three years.

After the pounding from the financial crisis, stocks got up off the mat, even as oil prices doubled between 2009 and 2011 and then stayed elevated for several years. The S&P continued higher despite the high price of oil.

SWTIC - Light Crude Oil - Spot (EOD) CME
 

The COVID crash in 2020 obliterated both oil prices and stock prices. They quickly recovered together until oil hit $100, which was around the same time that stocks topped out and the 2022 bear market began.

SWTIC - Light Crude Oil - Spot (EOD) CME
 

So what have we learned?

Investing when oil prices are rising is like driving during a bad storm. It doesn't necessarily mean that a crash is coming and it's time to panic. But you should be paying closer attention and proceeding more carefully.

Good investing,

Marc

P.S. As we enter Phase 2 of the AI revolution, demand for American oil and gas will explode...

And so will the income opportunities.

In fact, I've found a way to collect up to 16 payouts per year as everything plays out.

Click here to see how it works.

 
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