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Cybersecurity stocks fell amid fears that artificial intelligence system maker Anthropic is developing a more advanced platform.

Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news, as Brent crude trades over $110 a barrel for first time since Monday

Technical indicators say higher interest rates are coming later this year.

Consumer sentiment took a sharper than expected plunge as the U.S.-Iran War continues on. George Tsilis turns to this soft data and compares it with market trends while offering a "glass half full" perspective on Wall Street's "rolling correction.

The stock market was mixed for the week but the Nasdaq and S&P 500 hit new lows as oil prices stayed high and Treasury yields jumped. Arm Holdings shot higher.
The Israeli stock market, which initially rallied at the onset on the country's joint campaign with the U.S. against Iran, is now trading at pre-war levels.

Bob Michele, JPMorgan Asset Management Global Head of Fixed Income, joins Bloomberg Surveillance to discuss current macroeconomic conditions amid the backdrop of the Iran war, as Federal Reserve officials voice growing concern over potential fallout. "At these levels, there's no obvious solution," Michele says, adding that even amid oil hitting $100 a barrel, "We don't see recession, we see growth slowing down a lot from where we had it, inflation going up a little bit," putting the Fed back in wait-and-see mode.

The stock market closes for Good Friday next week ahead of the Easter holiday. Maundy Thursday has been historically positive for Wall Street.

The last thing investors are thinking about right now -- as Wall Street wrestles with surging oil prices -- is a short squeeze.

Consumers grew more pessimistic about the economy in the wake of the war with Iran as concerns with personal finances spiked due to higher gas prices and volatile financial markets. Middle-income and higher-income Americans had particularly large declines in sentiment.

March was the grimmest month of the year so far for consumers' economic sentiment as the Iran war raised gasoline prices and dented the stock market, the University of Michigan's latest monthly survey found.

Gulf markets have diverged sharply since the Iran war started, with Oman and Saudi Arabia outperforming as Dubai has faltered. Oil price volatility and geopolitical turmoil are shaping investor sentiment, as inflation remains a live risk for the region's dollar-pegged economies.

This week Dr. Ed Yardeni joins the Podcast to analyze how the Middle East conflict and 'the fog of war' are reshaping the global economic outlook. He discusses why he raised his recession odds to 35% and how current geopolitical volatility may force the Federal Reserve to pause interest rate cuts indefinitely.

A new policy initiative from the Federal Reserve, through one of its governors, Stephen Miran, is bringing bank loan ETFs back in focus. His proposal to shrink the balance sheet while potentially allowing lower rates creates a tricky backdrop for floating-rate strategies that have thrived in a high-rate environment.

US stocks fell Friday morning as oil prices jumped above $110 a barrel and President Trump's extended deadline for Iran to open the Strait of Hormuz failed to assuage investors.

Nouriel Roubini warned that Trump's approach to Iran risks escalation and could spark 1970s-style stagflation.

Loretta Mester, Princeton University Griswold Center for Economic Policy senior scholar and former Cleveland Fed president, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss the state of the economy, the Fed's interest rate path outlook, and more.

The ISM March flash report suggests modest job losses in March, although the recent March data points to a still solid labor market. The main worry now is stagflation and the Fed's reaction function—the market is starting to price a hike in 2026.

I see the S&P 500 at a critical juncture, with equal odds of a technical correction or a trend change, but growing risk to the downside. Macro deterioration, credit stress, and sector rotation—especially energy strength and metals weakness—signal mounting pressure on margins and economic activity.

The Federal Reserve reported a third consecutive annual operating loss of -$18.8 billion for 2025, but this marks a 76% improvement from 2024. The Fed's policy normalization and 175 bps in rate cuts have reduced its asset-liability mismatch and interest expenses, supporting a return to quarterly profitability.