
Ashgabat, March 9 | ORIENT. Have you ever noticed how news about distant events suddenly starts arriving at our doorstep without a knock? Today, on global exchanges—the very places where the fate of resources is decided—the price of oil crossed the psychological mark of $115, having made an incredible leap of almost a third of its value in a single moment.
Although just recently, on March 6, there was a forecast that if the conflict in the Middle East continued, the price of Brent, the world's leading crude oil brand, could break the psychological mark of $90 in the coming weeks (!) But just three days have passed, and the price has crossed the psychological mark of over $100 per barrel (meaning a barrel is almost 159 liters).
...For most of us, this is simply a figure from the internet or heard on the news on TV. But in reality, it concerns every trip we make to the market, supermarket, or local store.
Oil is often called the lifeblood of the economy. This is no exaggeration. Its price determines everything from the price of plastic packaging to the cost of shipping goods across borders.
Currently, global markets are experiencing high volatility (volatility, as experts call it), with the price of a barrel soaring by tens of dollars in a matter of hours due to alarming reports from Tehran and the Persian Gulf. This echo of global concerns inevitably reaches our region – Central Asia.
The states of Central Asia are now more closely interconnected than they seem. Moreover, Central Asia is not an "island," but rather part of a global mechanism. When prices for imported goods change in neighboring countries, it's not just a coincidence, but a result of the interconnectedness of global routes.
Our region is a single organism, where shared trade routes and peace at the borders are the main guarantee of a predictable tomorrow.
For now, these are just numbers on monitors in distant financial capitals, but they are precisely what determines the price of a car part, a potato, a smartphone, or ice cream, which we rush to our usual stores for. And then, suddenly, we see that the prices have changed.
Understanding how these invisible threads work helps us view events without undue anxiety, but with common sense. Tomorrow, we'll try to delve a little deeper into this mechanism to understand why "black gold" sets the pulse of global trade beating so vigorously.
To cut a long story short, by the end of this Monday, March 9, we had set a historic precedent. The price of Brent crude was fluctuating wildly between $111 and $116.
The world hasn't seen such a sharp jump in decades. This isn't just a rise—it's a signal that the old rules of the game no longer apply.
And tomorrow we'll see whether this peak will prove to be the ceiling or whether an even steeper rise awaits. So, until tomorrow...