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๐ฆ Duck It Now
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July 14, 2026
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Your Daily Money Briefing
Oil Just Had Its Biggest Two-Day Jump Since 2020 โ And Today Brings the Inflation Report That Decides What Happens Next
Four stories about the economy and markets that actually affect your wallet. Plain English, no jargon, no hype โ just what happened and why it matters.
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Trump Reinstates an "Iranian Blockade." Oil Just Had Its Biggest Jump in Six Years.
President Trump announced Monday he's reinstating what he's calling "THE IRANIAN BLOCKADE" โ a 20% fee on all cargo crossing the Strait of Hormuz, aimed at stopping Iran's ships and customers specifically, according to his post on social media. The market's reaction was immediate and dramatic: Brent crude surged nearly 13% over two trading sessions to cross $86 a barrel, its biggest two-day jump since 2020.
Duck it โ a "targeted" blockade on a waterway that carries a fifth of the world's oil doesn't stay neatly targeted for long. Even the fear of broader disruption is enough to move prices this fast.
Why it matters to you: at this pace, expect gas station prices to start reflecting this within the week. Budget accordingly if you've got summer road trips planned.
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Odds of a Fed Rate Hike Jumped From 34% to 43% Overnight. Today's Inflation Report Could Move That Number Again.
The market-implied odds of a quarter-point Fed rate hike at the July 28-29 meeting jumped to 43.3% this morning, up from 34.2% just last Friday โ a fast shift, driven directly by the oil spike in story #1. All eyes are now on this morning's Consumer Price Index report, due at 8:30am ET. Economists expect June inflation cooled to 3.8% from 4.2%, but if oil-driven price pressure shows up instead, that rate-hike probability could climb even further.
Why it matters to you: this single number, out this morning, could swing mortgage rates, credit card rates, and savings yields for weeks. If you have a rate-sensitive decision pending, today's report is worth watching in real time.
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The Market Looks Calm on the Surface. Underneath, Individual Stocks Are Swinging Wildly.
Here's a genuinely strange market signal: the S&P 500's "Dispersion Index" โ a measure of how differently individual stocks are moving from each other โ just hit 47%, its highest reading since 2018. Normally that would come with a spike in the VIX, Wall Street's main fear gauge. Instead, the VIX is sitting calmly at 17.33. The gap between the two measures just set a new record. Some analysts point to retail investors piling into call options on big tech names as part of what's driving individual stocks to swing harder than the index as a whole.
Why it matters to you: a calm-looking overall market can hide a lot of turbulence in individual stocks and sectors. If your portfolio is concentrated in a few names rather than broad index funds, don't assume a quiet VIX means a quiet ride for you.
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The Big Banks Report Today โ And They'll Set the Tone for Earnings Season
Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and Goldman Sachs all report quarterly earnings today, officially kicking off this earnings season alongside the CPI report. Analysts are watching for whether corporate profit growth โ which has topped 20% for two straight quarters โ can hold up as oil prices spike and rate expectations shift. Separately, JPMorgan issued a note downplaying recent weakness in chip stocks, arguing the pullback reflects crowded trading positions rather than any real slowdown in AI investment demand.
Why it matters to you: bank earnings are often read as a proxy for the health of the broader economy โ consumer spending, loan demand, and credit quality all show up in these reports before they show up anywhere else.
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This is a market news summary, not investment advice. Economic and financial conditions are subject to change โ please make your own decisions and consider talking to a licensed financial advisor before acting on anything here.
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