Trump says Iran war "close to over" amid hopes for more negotiations
Investing.com - Bank of America recommends selling oil above $100 per barrel, citing expectations that such levels would trigger policy responses to mitigate risks to the broader economy.
The firm notes that oil has gained 69.2% year-to-date, outperforming commodities at 40.8% and gold at 17.4%, while the S&P 500 has fallen 2.5% and bitcoin has dropped 20.0% over the same period. Federal Reserve rate cut expectations for June have declined from 100% probability to 25% as oil prices tighten financial conditions.
Bank of America draws parallels to the 2007-2008 period when oil rose from $70 per barrel in August 2007 to $140 per barrel in July 2008 amid subprime market tremors. Oil peaked on July 3, 2008, the same day the European Central Bank raised rates by 25 basis points, followed 74 days later by Lehman Brothers’ collapse and oil’s subsequent fall to $40 per barrel.
The firm identifies the bigger risk for stocks as earnings per share rather than inflation, noting that major banks serve as the connection between Wall Street and Main Street. The bank index trading below 150 signals concerns about buying cyclical stocks during banking sector weakness.
Bank of America also recommends buying the 30-year U.S. Treasury yield above 5%, the U.S. dollar above 100 on the DXY index, and the S&P 500 below 6,600. The probability of a European Central Bank rate hike by June 2026 now stands at 75%.
In other recent news, Bank of America has advised selling oil if it surpasses $100 per barrel, anticipating policy responses to manage economic risks. This recommendation comes as oil prices have surged by 69.2% year-to-date, significantly outperforming other commodities. Meanwhile, Barclays has adjusted its forecast for Federal Reserve rate cuts, now expecting the first reduction in September due to higher inflation projections and tensions related to the Iran conflict. The bank predicts only a single 25-basis-point rate cut this year, with a subsequent cut delayed to March 2027. Goldman Sachs has revised its U.S. GDP growth forecast for the fourth quarter of 2026, reducing it by 0.3 percentage points to 2.2% amid rising oil prices linked to the Iran war. The firm also projects Brent crude to average $98 per barrel in March and April before dropping to $71 by late 2026. Additionally, Goldman Sachs’ Q1 GDP Tracker stands at 3.3%, following a narrower-than-expected U.S. trade deficit in January. Lastly, Bank of America analysts have cautioned against a hasty rate cut by the Federal Reserve, citing persistent underlying inflation concerns.
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