Reports filtering in that Iran launched missiles at US Navy shipsNASDAQ and S&P closed lower. No record close todayFed’s Williams: There’s a lot of uncertainty in the economy right nowTrump: Agreed to give Von Der Leyen until July 4 to fulfill trade agreementMexico central bank cuts rates but signals caution aheadUS crude oil futures settle at $94.81More from Fed’s Hammack: I need to keep an open mind about the next policy moveECB Schnabel: Some damage from Iran War will be hard to reverseWSJ: Saudi Arabia and Kuwait lift restrictions on US military use of bases.Fed’ Daly: Committed to bringing inflation back to Fed’s 2% targetCrude oil moving off of low levels and back toward the next target at the $95 areaIran can outlast Trump’s Hormuz blockade for monthsNY Fed Survey of consumer expectations:1Y inflation higher @ 3.6% vs 3.4%. 5Y steady at 3%Fed’s Hammack: I see a lot of uncertainty in economic outlookUS construction spending for March 0.6% versus 0.2% estimateGeopolitical Tensions Push Oil Trading Higher in Q1, easyMarkets ReportsUS productivity preliminary for Q1 0.8% versus 1.0% estimate.US initial jobless claims 200K vs 205K estimateinvestingLive European markets wrap: Dollar, oil prices drop further on US-Iran hope
The U.S. dollar moved higher helped who is tired home how are you for against the major currencies today. The greenback strengthened against the
Euro (+0.14%), British pound (+0.26%), Australian dollar (+0.33%), New Zealand dollar (+0.24%)Japanese yen (+0.32%), Swiss franc (+0.19%), and Canadian dollar (+0.17%),
With those currencies gaining on the day. The US Dollar Index (DXY) edged up 0.17% to 98.193, reflecting a modest overall gain for the dollar on the day, though the moves were relatively contained across the board with no outsized swings in any single pair.
After riding a wave of optimism tied to U.S.-Iran peace deal hopes that drove all three major indices to record closes on Wednesday, Wall Street gave back some of those gains on Thursday. The S&P 500 fell 0.38% to close at 7,337.11, the Nasdaq Composite slid 0.13% to 25,806.20, and the Dow shed 313.62 points, or 0.63%, settling at 49,596.97 — snapping their record-close win streaks after all three had briefly touched fresh intraday all-time highs earlier in the session.
The pullback was broad-based. The S&P 500 was dragged lower by losses in Amazon and semiconductor stocks such as Broadcom and Micron, while the Dow was weighed down by Caterpillar (-3.37%) and JPMorgan (-2.74%), falling further away from retaking the 50,000 mark. The Russell 2000 was the hardest hit, closing down 1.74% as industrials, energy, and healthcare stocks sagged.
Lingering uncertainty around the Iran situation contributed to the afternoon reversal, as Iran continued to assess and criticize, the U.S. memorandum to end the war and restore tanker flows through the Strait of Hormuz, keeping traders cautious. Earnings were a mixed bag — strong results from Datadog (+28%) and Fortinet (+15%) weren’t enough to offset the broader drag, with Shake Shack’s near-30% plunge serving as the session’s most jarring headline
Fed speak today leaned hawkish overall as policymakers continued to emphasize elevated inflation risks, geopolitical uncertainty, and a still-resilient labor market. Cleveland Fed President Hammack said there is “a lot of uncertainty” surrounding the economic outlook and argued the Fed should remain patient and neutral rather than signaling a clear easing bias. She added that rates may need to stay on hold for “quite some time” and warned that the Iran conflict could create more persistent inflation pressures while also weighing on growth. San Francisco Fed President Daly reiterated the Fed’s commitment to returning inflation to its 2% target and stressed that policymakers cannot become complacent as higher oil prices and geopolitical tensions threaten to complicate the inflation outlook.
New York Fed President Williams struck a more balanced tone, acknowledging significant uncertainty but emphasizing that the US economy and labor market have remained relatively resilient. He also noted that rates are not historically high, a comment markets interpreted as slightly less hawkish than some of his peers, although he stopped short of signaling any imminent shift toward easing.
Separately, ECB Executive Board member Schnabel delivered a notably hawkish message, warning that some of the economic damage from the Iran war “will be hard to reverse.” She cautioned that markets may be underestimating the long-term inflation risks tied to higher energy costs, renewed supply-chain disruptions, and rising inflation expectations. Schnabel also warned that waiting for wage pressures to fully emerge before reacting could be “too late,” reinforcing expectations that the ECB could remain biased toward additional tightening if geopolitical-driven inflation pressures broaden further across the eurozone economy.
This article was written by Greg Michalowski at investinglive.com.