Graham Stephan: "En este caso, el conflicto en todo Oriente Medio hizo que los precios del petróleo superaran los 100 dólares el barril. Y con el Estrecho de..." — Parcialmente
📅 18.05.2026 · It Started: The US Debt Bomb Just Imploded · 👁️ 4
Parcialmente. La afirmación está parcialmente confirmada. El conflicto en Oriente Medio provocó un aumento de los precios del petróleo por encima de los 100 dólares el barril, y el Estrecho de Ormuz no estaba plenamente operativo en l...
"En este caso, el conflicto en todo Oriente Medio hizo que los precios del petróleo superaran los 100 dólares el barril. Y con el Estrecho de Ormuz aún no completamente operativo, se espera que los precios del petróleo suban aún más. Además, esto no solo afecta a los precios de la gasolina. El petróleo más caro fluye literalmente por toda la economía." "In this case, the conflict throughout the Middle East caused oil prices to spike past $100 a barrel. And with the straight of Hormuz still not fully operational, oil prices are only expected to go even higher. Plus, this doesn't just affect gas prices. Higher oil literally flows throughout the entire economy."
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Iniciar sesión…8% year-over-year, the highest reading since May of 2023. And PPI, which measures wholesale inflation, as in the inflation that businesses pay before it hits the customer, rose 6% year-over-year, the fastest pace since 2022, implying that inflation is coming back faster and stronger than ever, mainly the result of number two, oil. In this case, the conflict throughout the Middle East caused oil prices to spike past $100 a barrel. And with the straight of Hormuz still not fully operational, oil prices are only expected to go even higher. Plus, this doesn't just affect gas prices. Higher oil literally flows throughout the entire economy. We're talking shipping, trucking manufacturing food production, and more. So, when oil spikes this much, inflation eventually follows, which is not helped by number three. The government is flooding the market with debt. The fact is, we are running roughly $2 trillion a year in annual deficits. We are spending significantly more than we make. And…