Today: 9 June 2026
Linde stock price slips as oil and gas surge rattles U.S. markets — what investors watch next
3 March 2026
2 mins read

Linde stock price slips as oil and gas surge rattles U.S. markets — what investors watch next

New York, March 3, 2026, 15:54 EST — Regular session

  • Shares of Linde slipped roughly 1.6% with investors shying away from risk, as energy prices surged on the Iran conflict.
  • Wall Street’s main indexes slipped in the afternoon as traders kept a close watch on inflation data and tried to gauge when rate cuts might arrive.
  • Linde’s CFO is set to speak at a Raymond James conference on March 4, and investors are paying close attention to any remarks.

Linde plc (LIN) shares slid Tuesday afternoon, caught up in the wider downturn while oil and gas prices surged and investors braced for a more prolonged, turbulent Middle East shock.

The stock slipped 1.6% to $501.45. A sharp climb in energy prices—and the resulting inflation risk—was cited by traders as the main culprit, pulling down even typically stable industrial names.

The issue is coming to a head, with markets weighing if rising fuel costs will spiral into a broader macro headache—think higher inflation and tighter financial conditions—instead of just a fleeting one- or two-day story.

Companies linked to industrial output feel the pinch on two fronts: higher operating costs and potentially lower valuations, especially if investors see rate cuts getting delayed.

U.S. stocks sank in afternoon trading, with the Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq each slipping about 0.6% to 0.8%, Reuters reported. “Investors are growing anxious about the duration of the war and its impact on energy prices,” said Joseph Tanious, chief investment strategist at Northern Trust Asset Management, speaking to Reuters. Reuters

Energy saw the sharpest moves. Brent crude jumped close to 8%, topping $83 a barrel. European gas prices spiked as much as 40%—then pulled back, according to Reuters. The volatility followed growing shipping and production snags across the region, with Iran threatening to close the Strait of Hormuz.

Signs of de-risking were everywhere. “Oil, and the dollar, are the only two things that people want to own right now,” said Michael Arone, chief investment strategist at State Street Investment Management in Boston, in a Reuters story on the rush for liquidity. Reuters

Linde shares tracked declines across the industrial gases space; Air Products slipped roughly 1.2% during the session as well.

Linde’s seen as a barometer for industrial output—its gases find their way into everything from manufacturing floors to chemical plants and hospital wards.

There’s also something on the immediate horizon for investors. According to Linde’s investor relations page, CFO Matt White and investor relations head Juan Pelaez are set to appear at the Raymond James 2026 Institutional Investors Conference on March 4.

Linde bumped its quarterly dividend up to $1.60 a share, according to a Feb. 24 statement. Shareholders on record as of March 11 will get paid out on March 26.

The bigger threat sits outside. Ongoing conflict keeping oil and gas prices up—if that happens, inflation jitters could easily get worse, dragging the broader market lower and taking down even the top-tier industrial stocks with it.

On March 4, attention turns to Linde management’s readout on both demand and pricing. Energy prices remain a wild card, especially with the ongoing situation around the Strait of Hormuz.

Stock Market Today

  • Barclays Prefers Japan's Nikkei Over South Korea's Kospi for Investment Safety
    June 9, 2026, 12:17 PM EDT. Barclays analyst Ajay Rajadhyaksha highlights Japan's Nikkei as a safer investment compared to South Korea's Kospi due to three key factors. Firstly, Japan's improving macroeconomic environment supports more stable growth. Secondly, the Nikkei offers greater diversification, whereas the Kospi depends heavily on a few AI-related stocks, creating concentrated risks. Lastly, this focus on a limited number of companies has dampened risk-adjusted returns in the Korean market, making it effectively a "two-man index." The findings suggest investors seeking stability and balanced exposure might prefer Japan's stock market over South Korea's at present.

Latest articles

Costco Drops Kirkland Prices While Prepping New Florida Warehouse

Costco Drops Kirkland Prices While Prepping New Florida Warehouse

9 June 2026
Costco slashed prices on select Kirkland Signature products by up to $10 as part of its strategy to boost membership renewals, but shares barely moved, last at $973.50, down $1.25, after Q3 net sales rose 11.6% to $69.15 billion and net income hit $2.19 billion; management emphasized the cuts are strategic, not a chainwide rollback, amid slowing paid membership growth and ongoing competitive pressure.
Paranovus Stock Rockets 620% as $195 Million Share-Sale Filing Changes the Story

Paranovus Stock Rockets 620% as $195 Million Share-Sale Filing Changes the Story

9 June 2026
Paranovus Entertainment shares soared 620% to $6.76 after filing to potentially sell up to $195 million in new stock—an amount far exceeding its $7.14 million market cap—raising major dilution risks for investors as the company eyes acquisitions but warns that future share sales could pressure the stock price or threaten operations.
Coupang Stock Gains as Privacy Ruling Approaches

Coupang Stock Gains as Privacy Ruling Approaches

9 June 2026
Coupang shares jumped 2% to $15.49, outperforming a falling market, as investors braced for South Korea’s privacy regulator to decide June 10 on possible sanctions over a data breach exposing 33.6 million records—a ruling that could trigger fines up to 3% of sales and impact the stock’s recovery.
AEP’s $78 Billion Grid Plan Spurs Data Center Hopes

AEP’s $78 Billion Grid Plan Spurs Data Center Hopes

9 June 2026
AEP lifted its five-year capital plan to $78 billion after signing 7 gigawatts of new large-energy project agreements, with 90% of 63 gigawatts of expected incremental load by 2030 tied to data centers; shares recently traded at $127.27, up 26.9% over 52 weeks, with analysts’ mean price target at $142.76, as investors weigh execution risks and a new data-center rate structure.
Dow climbs in New York, but gains may stall

Dow climbs in New York, but gains may stall

9 June 2026
Dow jumps 154.87 points as tech rebounds and oil prices drop, with chipmakers like Intel and Broadcom up sharply; investors brace for Wednesday’s key inflation data and next week’s Fed meeting, which could sway rate expectations and market direction.
MARA stock jumps premarket as annual filing opens door to selling bitcoin stash
Previous Story

MARA stock jumps premarket as annual filing opens door to selling bitcoin stash

CrowdStrike stock holds steady after upbeat 2027 forecast as Wall Street sizes up ARR
Next Story

CrowdStrike stock holds steady after upbeat 2027 forecast as Wall Street sizes up ARR

Go toTop