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A barrel of Brent crude oil, the international benchmark, climbed to $115 today. That means gas prices are poised to reach $4 a gallon, a mental and financial hurdle many consumers won’t cross. In today’s newsletter, Marketplace’s Kristin Schwab takes stock of where the oil market is, where it’s heading, and what that means for the economy. The Middle East war is also squeezing helium, diesel, fertilizer and … butter chicken? We’ll explain. Plus, what you can expect from  Friday’s jobs report. — Carrie Barber, newsletter editor 
A woman cleans her windshield while filling her tank at a gas station.
A $100 barrel of oil translates to about $4 for a gallon of gas. (Genaro Molina/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Oil passed $100 a barrel, and prices are expected to climb
Prices go up faster than they come down. Damaged oil infrastructure in the Middle East makes that especially true.
It took a month for oil to go from $60-something a barrel to $100. Hugh Daigle, a professor of petroleum engineering at the University of Texas at Austin, said believe it or not, that’s actually the market showing restraint.
 
“Now that we see that this may be a prolonged conflict, I would bet that it’s more likely that the prices will climb faster than they have over the past month,” he said.
 
Markets are finally pricing in the war, and will do so even if it were to end tomorrow.
 
“It would take months for the price to come back to kind of that February baseline, if it ever does,” Daigle said.
 
There’s a saying in the oil industry that prices go up like a rocket and come down like a feather. That’s especially true in this case, Daigle said, because of damage to oil and gas infrastructure around the Persian Gulf.
 
“That’s the sort of thing that’s gonna make these high prices persist for a long time,” he said.
 
For consumers, $100 a barrel is also a turning point because it translates to moving from $3-something to $4-something for a gallon of gas.
 
“You know, in the United States, the great Satan is high gas prices,” said Tom Kloza, chief energy advisor at Gulf Oil.
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News you should know
Let’s do the numbers
  • Stocks were in flux today while oil prices climbed along with uncertainty about an end to the Middle East war. President Donald Trump’s conflicting comments on social media didn’t help. The S&P 500 dipped 0.4%, the Dow added 0.1%, and the Nasdaq fell 0.7%.  

  • The national average for a gallon of regular gas was $3.99 today, according to AAA.

  • We'll get an update on jobs and unemployment for March on Friday. Economists say we shouldn't expect to see much impact from the Iran war — for now.

  • We talked to a restaurant owner and a dog gear maker to see if they're hiring amid inflation, tariffs, and a shrinking immigrant workforce. Here’s what they told us.

Government
  • TSA workers began receiving backpay today for working during the partial government shutdown, and airport security lines started to dwindle.

  • Banks can’t lend if they don’t have deposits, and smaller banks are struggling to hang on to them. For years, financial institutions have competed to offer customers higher interest rates while the Federal Reserve was cutting them. Here’s how some smaller banks are playing the long game.   

Tech 
  • A helium shortage looming since the start of the Middle East war is here, and it’s bad news for more than party balloons. Here are some surprising industries that rely on the gas.

  • The MLB will now let players challenge balls and strikes, using a sophisticated camera system to check umpires’ work. “Marketplace Tech” looked at how it works.


QUOTE OF THE DAY
“By golly, this administration owes me money because they got me in this situation.”
— Chris Gibbs, soybean and corn farmer in Maplewood, Ohio
Like many farmers in the U.S., Gibbs already knows he’ll end this year in the red — again. Some can’t afford to plant their crops because of what war in the Middle East has done to the price of diesel and fertilizer. We headed to Ohio farm country, where Gibbs told us how tariffs have made his existing crops unprofitable.
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A woman covers her face with her hands. Behind her is a wall of sticky notes, each with business jargon written on them.
Butter chicken requires a lot of cooking gas, and the war is making the fuel harder to get in India. (Arun SankarAFP via Getty Images)
Final note
How the Middle East war is showing up across the globe
It’s more than just gas. Ripple effects from the war in the Middle East mean shorter showers in South Korea, shorter shirt sleeves in Thailand, and shorter menus in India — no butter chicken. The New York Times rounded up the knock-on effects. Here’s a gift link.
 
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