NEW YORK, March 11, 2026, 13:21 EDT
By 11:35 a.m. EDT Wednesday, the Dow Jones Industrial Average had slipped 418.23 points, or 0.88%, to 47,288.28, as traders shrugged off an inflation report that matched expectations and zeroed in on rising oil prices, along with renewed concerns over a potential price shock tied to the U.S.-Israeli conflict with Iran. Losses in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq were smaller. MarketWatch
The slide’s significant now because the Dow had turned into a pretty direct read on how the market was moving past the big tech names. With only 30 blue-chip companies, and price weighting—meaning heftier stocks sway it more—the Dow is still sitting more than 5% under that all-time closing high of 50,115.67 from Feb. 6, when it first cracked the 50,000 mark. SP Global
The consumer price index (CPI), which tracks prices on everything from groceries to services, rose 0.3% in February compared to January and was up 2.4% on the year—right in line with expectations. This data, though, doesn’t reflect the impact of the late-February strikes on Iran. Gasoline has already surged 20% to $3.58 a gallon since the conflict broke out. Economists told Reuters that March inflation could now jump as much as 1.0%. Reuters
“The picture has changed substantially since this reading was taken, so the relevance is minor,” said Eugene Epstein, head of trading and structured products at Moneycorp. Brian Jacobsen, chief economist at Annex Wealth Management, didn’t mince words: “Instead of deflation from energy, we will get inflation.” Reuters
Tech stocks weren’t dragging the market down on Wednesday. Oracle jumped roughly 12%, fueled by a revenue outlook that soothed concerns around its big AI investments. Hargreaves Lansdown’s Matt Britzman pointed out that fresh contracts allow clients to pay upfront or supply their own hardware, trimming Oracle’s own outlay for expansion. Reuters
The Dow’s drop took back much of Tuesday’s short-lived stability. In the previous session, the index dipped only 0.07% while Brent crude tumbled 11%, closing at $87.80, after President Donald Trump commented the war might be “over soon.” Sameer Samana at Wells Fargo Investment Institute noted oil could ultimately return to a $65-to-$75 range. Reuters
Optimism didn’t last. By Wednesday, sentiment had soured as the International Energy Agency signed off on a major release—400 million barrels—from strategic reserves, marking its largest effort yet. Still, fresh attacks on ships in the Strait of Hormuz kept supply jitters front and center. That narrow channel handles about a fifth of daily global oil and LNG movement. Reuters
Oil remains the wild card for the Dow at this point. Should reserve releases take hold and Gulf supplies resume, inflation could just as easily backtrack as it spiked. But if the outages stretch on, Wood Mackenzie warns Brent could touch $150 a barrel within weeks, even tossing out $200 oil as a plausible scenario this year. Reuters
Traders have already dismissed the February CPI; their focus has shifted to the upcoming fuel bill.