MARKET COMMENTARY

Last week's holiday-shortened trading period was defined by tension between the ripple effects of the ongoing geopolitical conflict and surprisingly resilient domestic data. 

 

Better-than-anticipated employment figures steadied nerves and revived the soft-landing narrative, even as elevated interest rates kept a ceiling on how far stocks could rally.

 

Beneath the surface, investors shifted toward quality companies and more defensive sectors, while rate-sensitive growth names stayed volatile. 

 

Below is a look at the forces behind last week's moves and what to keep an eye on in the coming week. 

 

Stock Index Performance 

 

All three major indexes posted solid weekly gains:

  • The S&P 500 advanced 3.36%.
  • The Nasdaq 100 climbed 3.95%.
  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 2.96%.

What•s Driving Markets Right Now

  • Oil Markets and the Iran Shock. The US-Israel conflict with Iran has pushed oil back into triple-digit territory, with Brent crude climbing more than 60% during March on fears of supply disruptions around the Strait of Hormuz. For investors, the implications are straightforward: higher fuel and transport costs delay inflation's retreat and put pressure on consumer spending.
  • Sentiment Stabilizes After a Turbulent Stretch. Emerging from a difficult run, investor sentiment began to improve. Treasury yields stayed elevated as markets absorbed the Fed's •one cut in 2026• outlook, weighing on rate-sensitive growth and technology stocks early in the week. Confidence built steadily, with upbeat ADP jobs data and solid retail and manufacturing figures, before Friday's jobs report eased lingering fears of a sharper downturn.
  • Good News on Jobs, With a Few Caveats. March delivered an encouraging surprise on Friday. Employers added 178,000 new positions, roughly doubling what analysts had expected, with gains led by health care, construction, and transportation. February's numbers were revised sharply lower, and the average workweek shortened slightly. Still, the economy is expanding at a measured pace, solid enough to ease recession fears, but it is likely that the performance is not strong enough to alter the Fed•s current stance.

The Week Ahead 

 

The primary focus will be on incoming inflation data, with the March Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index due Thursday, April 9. Additionally, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) minutes from the March meeting are set to be released on Wednesday, April 8, and will also be closely watched. Markets will be listening for any signal that policymakers view recent price pressures as temporary or persistent. Hotter readings would reinforce the higher-for-longer rate path; softer data would support the view that the economy is cooling gradually.

 

As the Q1 earnings season gets underway, attention shifts to what corporate America reports about demand, margins, and pricing power. Management commentary around energy costs, borrowing rates, and geopolitical disruptions will be just as revealing as the numbers, helping clarify whether recent volatility was a sentiment reset or an early signal of a more challenging path for equities.

 

The period ahead will likely test patience, as incoming inflation data, earnings reports, ongoing conflict, and Fed commentary keep markets unsettled.