Wall Street concluded Friday’s trading session sharply lower, marking the conclusion of one of 2026’s most challenging weeks for equities. The S&P 500 declined 1.3% during Friday’s session, bringing year-to-date losses to 1.5%. Tech-heavy Nasdaq tumbled 1.6% on the day, extending its 2026 decline to 3.7%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed approximately 450 points.
[[IMG_4]]E-Mini S&P 500 Mar 26 (ES=F)The primary catalyst for market distress stems from escalating conflict in Iran, severely restricting petroleum shipments through the strategically vital Strait of Hormuz. Under normal circumstances, this critical waterway facilitates approximately 20% of global seaborne crude oil transport.
The disruption has effectively stranded roughly 16 million barrels without viable routes to market, based on analytics from Vortexa. Storage facilities have reached capacity. Production cutbacks are underway. Oil prices have exploded upward by more than 36% over seven days, breaking through $91 per barrel — representing the steepest weekly increase recorded since at least 1985.
Analysis from Goldman Sachs suggests that sustained elevated crude prices over multiple months could push annual headline inflation back toward the 3% range. This stands notably above the Federal Reserve’s established 2% objective.
Ten-year Treasury yields have advanced past 4.14%. Market expectations for interest rate reductions have moderated as participants evaluate the potential for rising energy costs to impede inflation normalization. Fed policymakers including Neel Kashkari and John Williams indicated it remains premature to fully gauge the impact.
Wednesday’s February Consumer Price Index release and Friday’s January Personal Consumption Expenditures data will provide crucial insights into price pressures before next week’s Federal Reserve policy announcement.
[[IMG_5]]Source: Forex FactoryThe February employment situation report intensified investor concerns. American employers shed 92,000 positions, a stark reversal from analyst projections calling for 55,000 job additions. The unemployment rate climbed to 4.4% from January’s 4.3% reading.
Certain economists attributed the weakness to temporary distortions, notably a Kaiser Permanente labor action that eliminated 37,000 positions from the tally. BNP Paribas economist Andrew Husby characterized the outcome as influenced by “exceptional circumstances.”
Alternative perspectives emerged. Bolvin Wealth Management’s Gina Bolvin identified “a divided economy — decelerating overall expansion combined with rapid technological disruption.” Block, helmed by Jack Dorsey, eliminated 4,000 positions in February, with company leadership directly citing artificial intelligence implementation as the driver.
Oracle delivers quarterly results Tuesday. Shares have plummeted more than 50% from September peak levels. The enterprise software giant recently unveiled ambitions to secure $50 billion in financing for artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion. Adobe and Hewlett Packard Enterprise also report results this week, joined by Dollar General, Li Auto, and Nio.
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