# Dow Falls More Than 400 Points After Trump Comments Spike Oil, Surprise Job Loss in February: Live Updates
**Published: March 6, 2026 — Updated Constantly**
You know that sick feeling when you're watching your 401(k) balance and the numbers just keep getting smaller?
That's where millions of Americans are right now.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average has plunged more than 400 points in early trading, extending a brutal week that has seen the index shed more than 1,600 points over two sessions . The catalyst? A toxic cocktail of geopolitical chaos and economic weakness that's sending shockwaves through every corner of the market.
President Trump's comments acknowledging that oil prices could spike "temporarily" due to the Iran conflict have done nothing to calm nerves . Combined with a stunning jobs report showing the U.S. economy unexpectedly shed 92,000 workers in February, investors are heading for the exits .
Let me walk you through exactly what's happening, why the markets are reacting so violently, and what this means for your money.
## The Short Version: What You Need to Know
**The Dow is down more than 400 points.** That's on top of a 785-point drop Thursday and an 831-point plunge earlier in the week . The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are also deep in the red.
**Oil has exploded higher.** WTI crude surged past $86 a barrel on Friday, hitting its highest level since April 2024 . Brent is trading above $89. Kuwaiti crude jumped more than 10% in a single session to nearly $93 .
**Trump admitted prices could rise.** The president acknowledged for the first time that the conflict with Iran would hit Americans' wallets, though he insisted prices would eventually fall .
**The jobs report was a shocker.** The U.S. economy lost 92,000 jobs in February when economists expected gains of around 55,000-60,000 . The unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%.
**The stagflation fear is real.** Rising energy costs + weakening labor market = the worst-case scenario for the Federal Reserve .
## The Trump Factor: President Acknowledges Economic Pain
For the first time since the strikes began, President Trump has publicly acknowledged what every American is about to feel in their wallet.
"Oil prices will be higher for a while," Trump told reporters in the Oval Office alongside German Chancellor Friedrich Merz . But he offered reassurance: "Once this conflict is over, oil prices will come down, and I believe they will be even lower than before."
Merz was less optimistic, delivering a stark assessment: "This will of course hurt our economy. Oil prices, gas prices as well. So we all hope this war will end as quickly as possible."
The Washington Post noted that this marks the first time Trump has admitted the military action would cause economic harm to Americans . The admission comes as U.S. casualties mount and thousands of Americans remain stranded in the Middle East.
For markets, Trump's words offered little comfort. Investors are now pricing in a prolonged conflict, with Goldman Sachs estimating an **$18 per barrel risk premium** already baked into prices .
## The Oil Spike: $86 and Climbing
The numbers coming out of energy markets are genuinely staggering.
**Table 1: Oil Price Explosion (as of March 6, 2026)**
| **Benchmark** | **Price** | **Weekly Change** | **Context** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| WTI Crude | $86.25 | +18% | Highest since April 2024 |
| Brent Crude | ~$89 | +15% | Touched 52-week high of $85.85 |
| Kuwaiti Crude | $92.81 | +10% (single day) | Premium over international benchmarks |
| UAE Murban | ~$93.63 | Sharply higher | Physical barrels increasingly scarce |
**Why this is different:** The Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world's oil flows, is effectively closed . Iran's Revolutionary Guards have warned ships not to transit, and at least 10 vessels have been attacked. Major carriers like Maersk and MSC have suspended operations.
Iraq has already begun shutting in production, with approximately **1.5 million barrels per day taken offline** . Iranian exports, which had been running at about 1.5 million bpd before the conflict, have effectively ceased.
Qatar's Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi delivered a chilling warning: if the strait remains blocked, crude could hit **$150 per barrel within two to three weeks**, with gas prices quadrupling to $40 per MMBTU .
## The Jobs Bomb: 92,000 Lost
Just as the energy crisis was heating up, the U.S. labor market delivered its own shock.
### The Headline Numbers
Nonfarm payrolls fell by **92,000 in February** . Economists polled by Bloomberg had expected gains of around 55,000 . It's the third payroll decline in the past five months.
The unemployment rate rose to **4.4%** , the highest since December 2025, with about 7.6 million Americans now counted as unemployed .
Revisions to previous months painted an even bleaker picture. December payrolls were revised from a gain of 48,000 to a **loss of 17,000**. January's numbers were trimmed slightly to 126,000. Combined, that's 69,000 fewer jobs than previously reported .
### What Went Wrong
ING economists point to weather and strikes as temporary factors, but warn the underlying trend is weak .
**Table 2: February Job Losses by Sector**
| **Sector** | **Job Change** | **Context** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Healthcare | -28,000 | Driven by Kaiser Permanente strike affecting 30,000+ workers |
| Manufacturing | -12,000 | Trade policies haven't translated into job growth |
| Information Services | -11,000 | AI-driven restructuring accelerating |
| Transportation/Warehousing | -11,000 | Courier and messenger services hit hard |
| Leisure/Hospitality | -27,000 | Winter storms kept people home |
| Construction | -11,000 | Weather-related |
**The strike factor:** More than 30,000 healthcare workers from Kaiser Permanente facilities were on strike during the Bureau of Labor Statistics survey week . When workers are on strike, they're not counted as employed—even if they eventually return to their jobs.
ING analysts note that "the January numbers probably overstated the strength in hiring, while bad weather and strike actions probably mean that the February numbers overstate the weakness" . But they warn that "hiring remains subdued."
### The Wage Story
Despite the job losses, wages continue to grow. Average hourly earnings rose **0.4% for the month** and are up **3.8% year-over-year** .
ING suggests this may be a statistical artifact: "That is likely due to lower wage workers not being able to get to work and not being reported and skewing the reported earnings in favour of higher-earning office workers who could work from home" .
## The Market Carnage: Dow Down 400+
The combination of oil shock and jobs weakness has sent stocks into a tailspin.
**Table 3: Market Movers (as of March 6, 2026)**
| **Index** | **Performance** | **Context** |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Dow Jones | -400+ pts (-0.83%) | Extending 785-point Thursday loss |
| S&P 500 | -0.56% (Thursday) | Hit lowest level in over two months |
| Nasdaq | -0.26% (Thursday) | Tech under pressure |
| Dow Futures | -0.31% (premarket) | Signaling more pain ahead |
| S&P Futures | -0.41% (premarket) | |
**The sectors getting crushed:**
- **Consumer staples, materials, and industrials** led the declines Thursday
- **Airlines** are getting hammered on fuel costs
- **Retailers** like Gap tumbled 7% after weak earnings
**The lone bright spot:** Energy stocks are rallying on higher oil prices. The sector remains the strongest performer in the S&P 500 year to date, up 25% .
## The Fed Dilemma: Stagflation Fears
For central bankers, this is the nightmare scenario.
**The mixed signals:**
- Weaker jobs data → argument for rate cuts
- Surging oil prices → argument against cuts (inflation)
- Strong wage growth → argument against cuts
ING economists argue that "rate cuts are delayed rather than removed from forecasts." They've pushed their Fed rate cut forecast from June and September to September and December .
Morgan Stanley's Mike Wilson puts it in perspective: a true bear case would require oil prices to surge 75-100% year-over-year and stay elevated . We're not there yet—but the trajectory is worrying.
**The consumer impact:** ING warns that "the surge in energy costs, particularly for gasoline, that we expect over the next few weeks in response to global market moves, means that we could see real disposable incomes turning negative" .
## What This Means for You
### At the Pump
Gas prices are heading higher. With WTI above $86, expect $3.75-4.00 gas in the coming weeks. If oil hits $100, $4.50+ is likely.
### In Your Portfolio
Energy stocks remain the best hedge. Morgan Stanley recommends "sticking with what's working: remain defensive with a quality bias amid this period of heightened volatility" .
Scott Wren at Wells Fargo advises investors to "look through the headlines, and stick to a well thought out plan" . He favors sectors like Financials, Industrials, and Utilities positioned to benefit from a strengthening economy and AI infrastructure buildout.
### For Your Job
The labor market is softening. Hiring plans are down, and long-term unemployment is rising. If you're in a vulnerable position, it's worth updating your resume.
### For Your Sanity
Morgan Stanley's historical analysis offers some comfort: geopolitical shocks have not led to prolonged downturns in U.S. equities. From the Korean War to Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the S&P 500 has delivered average gains of 2%, 6%, and 8% over one, six, and twelve-month periods following such events .
## Frequently Asked Questions
**Q: Why did the Dow drop another 400 points?**
A: A toxic combination of surging oil prices (WTI above $86) and a shocking jobs report showing 92,000 jobs lost . Trump's admission that prices could rise didn't help .
**Q: How high could oil go?**
A: Qatar's energy minister warned of $150 within weeks if the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked . Morgan Stanley analysts are watching carefully.
**Q: Was the jobs report really that bad?**
A: Yes—92,000 jobs lost versus 55,000 expected . But weather and strikes played a role, and ING notes the data "probably overstates the weakness" .
**Q: Will the Fed cut rates now?**
A: Probably not soon. ING has pushed rate cut forecasts from June to September or December . The combination of strong wage growth and surging oil prices argues for patience.
**Q: Should I sell my stocks?**
A: Panic selling is rarely the right move. Morgan Stanley's analysis shows markets historically recover from geopolitical shocks . But defensive positioning makes sense.
## The Bottom Line
Here's what I keep coming back to.
We're watching a perfect storm develop in real time. Oil at $86 and climbing. Jobs losses mounting. The Strait of Hormuz a war zone. And a president who just admitted this is going to hurt.
**The numbers are stark:** The Dow down 400 points. WTI up 18% in a week. 92,000 jobs vanished .
**The uncertainty is real.** How long will the conflict last? How high will oil go? Will the jobs market bounce back or keep weakening?
**The Fed is trapped** between inflation and slowing growth, with no good options .
For investors, the path forward requires caution and diversification. Energy stocks are working. Defensive sectors are holding up. But broad market indices are under pressure, and the traditional 60/40 portfolio isn't providing the protection it once did.
For everyone else, it's a reminder that the global economy is more connected than we often realize. A war on the other side of the world can hit your wallet in ways you never expected.
The next few weeks will determine whether this is another temporary shock or the beginning of something worse. One thing is certain: the margin for error has never been narrower.
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*Got questions about how this affects your specific situation—your portfolio, your job, your travel plans? Drop them in the comments.*





