Dow Tests 45,000 as War Sends Oil to $110+ and the VIX Surges 50% in a Month
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SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF (DIA) has fallen 7.2% in the past month and 5.49% year-to-date as Brent crude surged to $116.51 a barrel on Iran-Israel tensions, with the Dow testing support near 45,000. Chevron (CVX) gained 40% year-to-date from the oil rally after hitting 1 million barrels per day production in the Permian, while Boeing (BA) fell 12% year-to-date weighed by $54.1 billion in debt and negative commercial margins, and JPMorgan Chase (JPM) declined 12% year-to-date despite a $50 billion buyback authorization.
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Houthi attacks on Israel and geopolitical escalation have triggered a 59% monthly surge in crude oil, pushing the OECD to estimate 4.2% US inflation this year and sending the VIX to 31.2, its highest level since April 2025.
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The SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF ((NYSE:DIA)) has slipped into correction territory, down 7.2% over the past month and 5.49% year-to-date as the US-Israel war with Iran sends oil prices surging and rattles blue-chip confidence. The ETF, which tracks 30 of America’s largest companies, is testing support near the 45,000 level on the Dow.
The trigger is acute: Brent crude leaped to $116.51 a barrel this morning (March 30), putting the global benchmark on track for a record 59% monthly surge, the steepest since the 1990 Gulf War. Meanwhile, WTI crude has reclaimed the psychological $100 level, currently trading near $102.14 per barrel as Houthi attacks on Israel over the weekend erased last week’s brief pullback.
The OECD now estimates US inflation will average 4.2% this year, fueled by these energy spikes, and the VIX has climbed to around 31.2. This is its highest reading since the April 2025 panic, representing a 73% increase in a single month.
Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
Sentiment on DIA on Reddit is uniformly bearish, with scores ranging from 28 to 32 across all tracked data points from March 27 to 30. The dominant thread is a post in r/stockmarket titled “The Dow!!!”, which accumulated over 7,300 upvotes and nearly 300 comments, with peak engagement Sunday afternoon drawing over 800 upvotes per hour.
The Dow!!!
by u/unknown in r/StockMarket
Three reinforcing problems are driving the bearish case:
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Consumer sentiment has collapsed to 53.3 on the University of Michigan index, firmly in recessionary territory (below 60), with households pricing in persistent inflation from elevated oil prices.
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The conflict is directly pressuring DIA’s heaviest sector: financials at 27% of the ETF, with JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon warning that “markets seem to underappreciate the potential hazards, including from complex geopolitical conditions, the risk of sticky inflation and elevated asset prices.”
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Microsoft, the ETF’s third-largest holding at roughly 5% of DIA, has fallen 24% year-to-date despite posting a 7.57% EPS beat last quarter, as investors balk at capital expenditures that nearly doubled year over year to $29.88 billion.
Chevron (NYSE:CVX) is the standout beneficiary, up nearly 40% year-to-date as oil prices surge, after hitting its Permian Basin production target of 1 million barrels of oil equivalent per day and raising its dividend for the 39th consecutive year. Boeing (NYSE:BA) is down 12% year-to-date, weighed by $54.1 billion in consolidated debt and commercial margins that remain negative despite a delivery ramp to 160 planes per quarter. JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) has pulled back nearly 12% year-to-date, though Reddit sentiment held mostly bullish around 62 to 66 through the weekend, as investors weigh its $50 billion buyback authorization against macro uncertainty.
The yield curve remains positively sloped, with the 10-year/2-year spread at 0.6%, suggesting a soft recession. The Fed funds rate sits at 3.75% after three cuts over the past year, leaving limited room to ease if oil-driven inflation persists. The White House extended its pause on strikes against Iranian energy infrastructure to April 6. Any progress toward reopening the Strait of Hormuz would remove the primary pressure on oil and on DIA’s support level. Until then, the exclamation points say everything.
Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.
And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.