new york light sweet crude settled at $67.49/bbl.
http://money.cnn.com/markets/commodities/according to the 2nd graph in the link below, this would appear to be the highest inflation-adjusted price since the beginning of the chart, in 1869.
http://www.wtrg.com/prices.htmnote, of course, that this means that oil prices are now higher in inflation-adjusted terms than at any point during the 1970s. the high oil prices of the '70s are almost universally blamed for the double-digit inflation of the late carter / early reagan years.
sustained high oil prices are a strong predictor of rampant inflation. true, we're not nearly as industrial an economy as we were in the '70s, but oil still has a huge impact.
another interesting economic data point: there's only a 36 bps difference between the 2-year and 30-year treasuries. this is remarkably flat. indeed, there's only a 3 bps difference between the 2-year and the 5-year.
http://money.cnn.com/markets/bondcenter/parts of the curve will likely invert within a week or two, with longer debt at lower yields than shorter debt. a fully inverted curve is almost always a harbinger of recession
again, today's economy is different (ain't that always the case?) most notably, the chinese have been buying the long bond in huge quantities, perhaps "artificially" inverting the curve.
nevertheless, these are NOT good signs.