Oil Stays Calm as Strong Earnings Keep Bull Market Intact

Despite renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, markets continue to display remarkable resilience. Major equity averages sit within striking distance of new all-time highs while oil, perhaps the biggest surprise of the year, remains anchored in the low $70s despite renewed hostilities. That combination, a contained energy shock alongside historically strong corporate profitability, continues to support an optimistic outlook for equities.

The behavior of oil has become one of the market’s most important signals. Earlier this year, few investors would have expected crude to remain near current levels if fighting in the region resumed. Yet expanding global production capacity, alternative export routes, adequate inventories, and softer demand have significantly reduced the market’s sensitivity to geopolitical disruptions. While gasoline prices have temporarily firmed because refinery crack spreads remain unusually elevated, crude itself has remained remarkably stable. If refining margins normalize over the coming months, gasoline prices could resume their downward trend, providing another modest tailwind for consumers and inflation.

The broader economy continues to show few signs of deterioration. Estimates for second-quarter GDP have converged around a healthy 2% to 2.5% growth rate, an encouraging outcome considering the uncertainty created by tariffs and geopolitical events earlier this quarter. Consumer spending remains solid, money supply continues expanding at a pace consistent with healthy credit conditions, and financial conditions remain accommodative without signaling excessive inflationary pressure. Those fundamentals continue to support the expansion.

This week’s inflation data will receive significant attention. Lower gasoline prices should produce another favorable headline CPI reading, although core inflation is unlikely to improve as rapidly. An underappreciated factor is the surge in memory chip prices driven by unprecedented AI infrastructure spending. Recent research suggests this alone could add roughly half a percentage point to core PCE inflation by year-end, even while contributing only modestly to CPI. Since the Federal Reserve places greater emphasis on PCE, policymakers will need to recognize that part of the inflation persistence reflects technology input costs rather than broad-based demand pressures.

See more: Falling Oil Prices Reinforce Bullish Outlook