As oil prices surged in the days following the outbreak of conflict with Iran, the Trump administration briefly entertained an unconventional idea: deploying the Treasury Department to trade oil futures as a way to calm the market. That idea has now been set aside, at least for the moment.
Officials within the administration discussed the concept but ultimately concluded that the Treasury’s ability to move markets in any meaningful way would be too limited to justify the move. The proposal never advanced beyond internal conversations, and no formal action was taken.
The development is a notable shift from the signals the White House had been sending just a day earlier. A senior administration official had suggested on Thursday that the Treasury was preparing to announce measures targeting rising energy costs, with the oil futures market specifically mentioned as one potential avenue. That announcement never came.
Oil prices and a market in motion
Global oil prices have climbed sharply since the Iran conflict began over the weekend, reflecting growing concern about disruptions to Middle East energy supplies. The surge has added pressure on an administration already contending with elevated fuel costs and a restless public feeling the effects at the pump.
Prices did pull back on Thursday for the first time in six days, a dip that coincided with reports that the U.S. government was considering stepping into the futures market. Whether those reports directly triggered the retreat is difficult to measure, but the timing drew attention across financial markets.
The brief retreat offered a glimpse into just how reactive energy markets have become to even the suggestion of government action. The administration’s silence since then has done little to ease underlying uncertainty about where prices are headed next.
The reserve question
Beyond the futures market, officials also weighed whether to tap the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, the government’s emergency stockpile of crude oil. That option was also pushed aside for now, with hesitation rooted in the current state of the reserve itself.
The stockpile sits at roughly 60 percent capacity, a level that gave officials pause about drawing it down further during an active conflict with no clear end in sight. Using a reserve that is already well below full capacity carries its own risks, particularly if the situation in the Middle East were to escalate further and create an even more severe supply crunch down the road.
What comes next
The White House has not ruled out future intervention entirely, and the energy price situation remains fluid. The Iran conflict continues to send tremors through global supply chains, and the pressure on administration officials to respond in some tangible way is unlikely to fade quickly.
For now, the clearest signal from Washington is one of restraint. The Treasury option has been shelved, the reserve remains untouched, and the administration appears to be watching and waiting rather than moving aggressively into the market.
That posture may be practical, but it leaves an open question hanging over energy markets and American households alike. If prices continue their climb and relief does not arrive from abroad or from easing tensions, the options the White House passed on this week may find their way back onto the table.

