That has sparked worries of a surge in inflation and a slowdown in the global economy.
As a consequence, stock prices have slumped, with oil-importing countries particularly hard-hit.
In Europe, London has lost about 6% and Frankfurt and Paris more than 7%.
In Asia, Tokyo fell 5.5% and Seoul 10.6%, having suffered a record daily fall of 12% on Wednesday.
This latest crisis follows a number of extraordinary events that markets have had to react to in recent years, from the coronavirus pandemic, the war in Ukraine disrupting energy and food supplies, to Trump’s tariff offensive.
‘One shock after another’
“For more than five years now, it’s been one shock after another,” said Stanislas de Bailliencourt, deputy head of investments at asset manager Sycomore.
Volatility has been high since the beginning of the week, a sign investors are reacting as new information comes in, with markets capable of shifting direction during the course of the day.
“What it’s forced everybody to do is to be hyper vigilant about the news,” said Interactive Brokers analyst Steve Sosnick.
“Everybody now is being forced to be an oil trader whether you want to be or not, because that’s just how stocks are trading, bonds are trading.”
The US dollar has been a beneficiary of the turmoil, in part because it is seen as a safe haven.
It had been sliding for months over the uncertainty triggered by Trump’s policies, but it gained 2.2% against the euro this past week.
But as an oil-exporting country, the United States is not as exposed to a rise in global energy prices.
“We’ve seen capital being repatriated to the United States, which is clearly less dependent on hydrocarbon imports than Europe and the emerging countries,” said ING’s Juvyns.
Wall Street was considerably less impacted than exchanges in Asia and Europe, with the Dow shedding about 3% this week.
The US dollar even bested another traditional safe-haven asset: gold. The precision metal has lost 3.6% this past week.
‘Resilient global economy’
Sovereign debt is often another safe-haven investment in times of market turmoil, but government bonds haven’t benefited.
When investors pile into government bonds, the interest rates fall as buyers bid for them.
Instead they have risen this past week, with 10-year US Treasuries rising from 4% to 4.14%.
Germany’s 10-year bonds, the reference in the eurozone, rose from 2.6 to 2.9%.
The reason is that with higher inflation, investors no longer expect central banks to cut interest rates as quickly this year, or at all.
With the hands of central banks tied, investors are worried about the risk of stagflation – a period of economic stagnation and inflation – such as what happened after the first oil shock in 1973.
Some investors say the situation is different from the 1970s.
“The world today is much less dependent on oil than it used to be,” said Jean-Francois Robin, an analyst at Natixis CIB.
ING’s Juvyns sought to put the crisis in perspective.
“For now, this is clearly a less significant shock than that of tariffs,” he said.
After Trump slapped his “Liberation Day” tariffs on trading partners in April 2025, stock markets in the United States and Europe suffered daily losses of up to 6%.
Daily losses were even steeper during the Covid pandemic.
Moreover, stock exchanges were at or near record levels before the war broke out, while oil and gas prices were low.
“The global economy is much more resilient: companies have diversified their supply chains,” said Sycomore’s de Bailliencourt.
“But if the conflict drags on, we could run into more problems.”
– Agence France-Presse