RISINGGoldman Sachs Global Commodities ResearchMarch 2026🌍 GLOBALEconomy
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Goldman Sachs Raises Brent to $107: How Much More Will You Pay?

Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 Brent crude forecast by $8/barrel to $107 and WTI by $7 to $99 in March 2026 following the Iran-US military conflict. Fears of Strait of Hormuz closure — through which 21% of global oil flows — drove the biggest single-week oil price revision since Russia's 2022 invasion. This calculator helps you quantify exactly how this surge affects your monthly fuel bills, home heating costs, and business energy expenses in real dollar terms.

Concept Fundamentals
$107/bbl
New Brent Forecast
$99/bbl
New WTI Forecast
+$0.19/gal
Pump Price Surge
+$250/yr
Avg Household Impact
Calculate My Fuel SurgeUse the calculator below to see how this story affects you personally

About This Calculator: Oil Price War Impact 2026

Why: Millions of households and businesses urgently need to know their exact additional energy burden from this oil price shock so they can budget, plan efficiency investments, and make informed decisions about vehicle purchases or EV transitions.

How: Enter your current monthly fuel spend, fuel type, business energy costs, and home heating bill. The calculator applies Goldman Sachs's March 2026 oil price revision factors to estimate your precise additional annual energy cost with full breakdown.

Your exact monthly fuel cost increase from the Goldman oil forecast revisionAnnual heating bill surge based on natural gas-oil price correlation

Quick Examples — Click to Load

Your current average monthly spending on vehicle fuel (gasoline, diesel, or natural gas)
Select the fuel type you use most. Diesel surges more than gasoline; natural gas surges most in this conflict.
Your business's average monthly electricity + gas + fuel combined bill. Enter 0 if not applicable.
Average monthly natural gas or heating oil bill. This will surge ~12% from the oil shock.
Used to calculate how quickly an EV switch pays off relative to the oil surge savings
Different industries have different energy intensity levels, affecting your business energy cost increase percentage
oil_price_impact_analysis.shCALCULATED
Monthly Fuel Surge
$14
per month extra
Annual Fuel Extra
$165
fuel cost surge/yr
Total Annual Impact
$280
all energy combined
Overall % Increase
7.1%
energy cost surge
Heating Surge/Year
$115
nat gas correlation
Business Energy/Year
$0
commercial impact
Surge per Gallon
$0.19
pump price extra
EV Break-Even
727mo
from surge savings

📊 Annual Cost Increase by Category

Your additional annual energy costs broken down by fuel, heating, and business energy from the oil price shock

🍩 Your Energy Cost Impact Breakdown

Proportional share of your total annual extra energy burden by source

📈 Brent Crude Price Trajectory 2026

Goldman Sachs projected Brent crude path vs. pre-war baseline throughout 2026

⛽ Price Surge % by Fuel Type

How the $8/barrel Brent surge translates differently across fuel types — diesel and heating oil hit hardest

⚠️For educational and informational purposes only. Verify with a qualified professional.

Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 Brent crude oil forecast by $8/barrel to $107 and WTI by $7 to $99 in March 2026 following the Iran-US military conflict and resulting fears of Strait of Hormuz closure. The Strait carries 21% of global oil trade — about 21 million barrels per day. For consumers, every $10/barrel crude increase adds roughly $0.24/gallon at the pump, with diesel users and businesses facing even steeper surcharges. The average American household that spends $3,200/year on fuel and heating will face an additional $170-$450 in annual energy costs depending on usage patterns. Businesses with energy-intensive operations (manufacturing, transport, food service) can face margin compression of 1-5% from this single event.

$107
New Brent Forecast ($/bbl)
21%
Global Oil via Hormuz
+5.5%
US Gasoline Pump Surge
+12%
Natural Gas Price Spike

Sources: Goldman Sachs Global Commodities Research (March 2026), EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook, AAA Fuel Price Data, US DOE Energy Efficiency Reports.

Key Takeaways

  • • Goldman Sachs raised Brent crude to $107/barrel (+$8) and WTI to $99/barrel (+$7) — the biggest upward revision since Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine.
  • • Diesel users face a disproportionate 6.5% pump price increase vs. 5.5% for gasoline, as diesel is more directly crude-linked with fewer refining steps.
  • • Natural gas prices surge ~12% alongside oil in Middle East conflicts — critically affecting home heating bills in winter-heavy regions and gas-fired power generation.
  • • Manufacturing and transport businesses face the highest exposure (18-22% energy cost increase), while offices and services see more moderate impacts (8-10%).
  • • EV adoption accelerates during sustained oil price shocks: at $3.64/gallon (post-surge), a 250-mile/week driver breaks even on a $10K EV premium in approximately 54 months purely from fuel savings.
  • • The oil price shock has global secondary effects: airline fuel surcharges, higher food delivery costs, and supply chain repricing that typically adds 0.3-0.8% to consumer price inflation within 3-6 months.

Did You Know?

🛢️ The Strait of Hormuz is only 21 miles wide at its narrowest point — yet 21 million barrels of oil flow through it daily, representing $1.3 billion in oil value per hour at current prices.
⛽ A $10 increase in crude oil prices historically adds $0.24/gallon to US gasoline pump prices within 2-4 weeks, but gas prices fall more slowly when crude drops (called "rockets and feathers" pricing).
🏭 The US manufacturing sector consumes 24.3 quadrillion BTUs of energy annually. A sustained 10% energy price increase costs American manufacturers approximately $28 billion per year in direct energy expenses.
🌡️ Natural gas and crude oil prices typically move together with a 0.65-0.75 correlation coefficient. When Brent rises 8%, heating and cooking gas prices tend to follow with a 5-6 week lag.
✈️ Jet fuel typically surges 8-10% for every 8-10% crude oil increase. In 2026, every major airline operating out of the US faces roughly $180M-$2.1B in additional annual fuel costs depending on fleet size.
🔋 Every $10/barrel oil price increase makes EV break-even payback periods approximately 15% shorter. The Iran-US war oil spike brings the average US household EV payback period below 4 years for the first time.

How Does an Oil Price Shock Affect You?

From Crude Oil to Pump Price

Retail gasoline prices have four components: crude oil (~50%), refining costs (~15%), distribution and marketing (~15%), and taxes (~20%). When crude jumps $8/barrel, only the crude portion moves initially, adding ~$0.19/gallon. Over weeks, refiners may increase margins and logistics costs follow, creating a full pump price impact of $0.22-$0.28/gallon. Diesel, having a simpler refining process and less tax protection, moves faster and harder — typically adding $0.22-$0.24/gallon for the same crude shock.

The Natural Gas Correlation

While natural gas is technically a separate commodity with its own supply chain, it correlates strongly with oil during geopolitical Middle East crises because: (1) some power plants switch between gas and oil-based generation, creating cross-commodity demand; (2) LNG (liquified natural gas) exports compete with crude for the same tanker routes through the Strait of Hormuz; and (3) investor sentiment shifts toward all energy commodities simultaneously. During the Iran-US conflict, natural gas prices surged approximately 12% within 10 trading days.

The Business Cascade Effect

Energy cost increases cascade through business operations in three waves: first, direct energy bills rise (weeks 1-4); second, upstream supplier costs increase and suppliers raise prices (weeks 4-12); and third, staffing costs rise as workers demand cost-of-living adjustments (months 3-9). Manufacturing and transport businesses with tight margins (2-5% net margins) can see profitability wiped out entirely if they cannot pass costs to customers quickly enough. Service businesses with lower energy intensity face smaller but still meaningful impacts.

Expert Tips to Reduce Your Oil Surge Exposure

Lock in fuel contracts now: If your business uses significant diesel (trucking, agriculture, construction), negotiate fixed-price fuel supply contracts for 6-12 months. Energy suppliers often offer 3-8% discounts on volume commitments. A 100-gallon/day fleet can save $15,000-$25,000/year by locking in before prices rise further.
Invest in HVAC efficiency upgrades: Every $1,000 invested in insulation, smart thermostats, or heat pump systems typically saves $150-$300/year in energy at normal prices — and $200-$450/year at current elevated energy prices. The payback period shortens dramatically during oil price shocks, making now the optimal time to act.
Explore energy hedging via ETFs: Investors with high energy exposure can partially offset cost increases by holding energy sector ETFs (XLE, VDE) or crude oil futures-based ETFs (USO). A modest 5-10% portfolio allocation to energy equities when oil prices surge above $100/barrel has historically provided meaningful portfolio protection during multi-month oil price shocks.
Time major purchases around the oil cycle: Historical oil price shocks (2008, 2011, 2022) typically resolved within 6-18 months. If you're considering buying a vehicle, home, or major energy equipment, evaluate whether waiting 6-12 months might allow prices to normalize — or accelerate the purchase if EV incentives ($7,500 federal tax credit) make the break-even compelling right now.

Oil Price Shock Impact by User Type

User ProfileMonthly Fuel SpendSurge %Extra $/YearRisk Level
City apartment dweller (no car)$0+8-12%$50-$120 (heating only)Low
Suburban commuter (gas car)$200-$300+5.5%$132-$198/yr fuelModerate
Rural driver + large home$350-$500+5.5-12%$400-$850/yr totalHigh
Small business owner$3,000-$8,000+8-18%$2,880-$17,280/yrHigh
Fleet / trucking operator$20,000-$80,000+6.5-22%$15K-$211K/yrCritical
Industrial manufacturer$50,000-$500,000+18%$108K-$1.08M/yrCritical

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a $8/barrel oil price increase affect gas prices at the pump?

A $8/barrel crude oil increase translates to approximately $0.19 per gallon at the pump (one barrel = 42 gallons). Since crude represents about 50% of retail gasoline's price, the actual pump impact is 5-6%. Goldman Sachs's March 2026 forecast raised Brent to $107/barrel, an 8.1% surge from $99, adding roughly $0.19-$0.22/gallon depending on fuel type.

Why did Goldman Sachs raise its Brent crude forecast by $8?

Goldman Sachs raised its 2026 Brent crude forecast by $8 to $107/barrel in March 2026 following the Iran-US military conflict that triggered fears of Strait of Hormuz closure. The Strait carries 21% of global oil trade (roughly 21 million barrels per day). Every 1 million barrels per day reduction historically adds $3-5 to global oil prices, making this one of the most significant oil price shocks since 2022.

How does rising oil price affect household energy bills beyond fuel?

Oil prices affect not just gasoline but natural gas (correlated with a ~0.7 coefficient), electricity generation costs (up 4-8% per 10% oil increase), and petrochemical goods. The average US household spends $2,060/year on energy; a sustained 8% oil surge adds approximately $165-$250/year across all energy expenses including heating, cooling, and indirect costs embedded in food and consumer goods.

What is the Strait of Hormuz and why does it matter for oil prices?

The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman through which approximately 20-21 million barrels of oil pass daily — about 21% of global oil consumption. If Iran blocked the strait, analysts estimate oil could spike to $150-$200/barrel within weeks, adding $1.50-$3.00/gallon at US gas stations. It is the world's most critical energy chokepoint with no viable alternative route for most Persian Gulf exports.

Should I switch to an electric vehicle (EV) given higher oil prices?

The EV break-even calculation depends on your specific fuel costs. At current US average gas prices (~$3.64/gallon post-surge from $3.45), a driver spending $250/month on fuel saves ~$13.75/month from the oil surge alone. With an EV premium of ~$10,000, the oil-surge-specific break-even is lengthy — but full fuel replacement savings of ~$185/month gives a 54-month break-even on the $10K premium, often accelerated by federal tax credits.

How are diesel prices affected compared to gasoline in an oil price shock?

Diesel is more directly linked to crude prices than gasoline because its refining process is more straightforward and margins are tighter. A $8/barrel Brent increase typically adds $0.22-$0.24/gallon to diesel vs. $0.19/gallon to gasoline — a 6.0-6.5% pump increase vs. 5.5% for gasoline. Businesses using diesel (trucking, agriculture, construction, shipping) face disproportionately higher cost increases, translating to higher prices for nearly all delivered goods within 2-4 weeks.

Key Statistics: Iran-US War Oil Shock 2026

$107
Goldman Brent Target
21M bbl
Daily Hormuz Oil Flow
$0.19
Extra per Gallon (Gas)
+$250
Avg US Household/Year

Official Data Sources

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on Goldman Sachs's March 2026 oil price forecast revision (+$8 Brent, +$7 WTI) and historical crude-to-pump price relationships. Actual fuel price impacts depend on local market conditions, refinery margins, regional taxes, seasonal demand patterns, and geopolitical developments. Business energy impacts depend on your actual energy mix, contracts, and efficiency measures. EV break-even calculations are simplified and do not account for maintenance cost differences, depreciation, electricity rate variations, or government incentives. This is not financial or investment advice. Always consult an energy advisor or financial professional for personalized guidance.

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