A critical Fed meeting, $100 oil, and Micron earnings: What to watch this week

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US equities ended the week in the red Friday as the war in Iran heads into its third week and attention increasingly turns toward the impact of runaway oil prices on inflation.

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) closed out Friday down 0.6% for a loss of 1.6% on the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) lost 0.3%, or roughly 120 points, on Friday to close the week down 2%. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell 0.9% on Friday and ended the week in the red by 1.3%.

Calendar highlights

In the week ahead, all eyes will be on the Fed meeting — and what Chair Jerome Powell does or doesn't say about the impact of the war in Iran on inflation in his second-to-last meeting as chair.

In a relatively quiet week on the economic calendar, investors will get more information on the state of the labor market from ADP's weekly employment change numbers on Tuesday and Thursday's jobless claims data, alongside a slate of manufacturing data on Monday.

On the earnings calendar, Micron's Wednesday results will take the spotlight, with reports from Dollar Tree (DLTR), Oklo (OKLO), Macy's (M), and Darden Restaurants (DRI) also on the schedule.

Another big event to watch: Nvidia's (NVDA) biggest event of the year, GTC 2026, kicking off with a keynote from CEO Jensen Huang on Monday. (Preview here.)

Oil surfs the $100 mark

Three weeks in, the war in Iran is showing no signs of slowing down, and the Strait of Hormuz, the world's most important shipping chokepoint for the global energy industry, remains at a standstill.

Last Sunday, oil prices jumped over the critical $100 per barrel mark for the first time since the energy crisis kicked off by the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine. Prices quickly cooled off into the $80s, but drone strikes on critical infrastructure, force majeure declarations from major refineries and export terminals, and a growing list of production cuts throughout the Gulf states have sent prices right back up.

It all comes down to the Strait, where roughly 14 million barrels of crude oil traverse the 21-mile-wide waterway on a typical day. Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps has said it won't allow "a liter of oil" to cross.

Without an open Strait, strategists say prices will only continue to rise and remain elevated for longer. If the waterway remains blocked for 60 days, Goldman Sachs strategists say fourth quarter oil prices could average $93 per barrel on Brent (BZ=F) and $89 per barrel on US West Texas Intermediate (CL=F). And the fourth quarter is far away.

Read more: How oil price shocks ripple through your wallet, from gas to groceries