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Wall Street is bracing for a longer-term disruption from the war with Iran, and loading up on shares of oil-and-gas producers that have lagged behind in recent years.

Robust job growth in March suggests that the labor market remains relatively healthy, allowing officials at the central bank to focus on fighting inflation.

National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett reacts to the US March jobs report and discusses oil market supply disruptions related to the war in Iran and the potential impact of oil prices on the US economy. -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?

Hope springs eternal in April and that applies on the Street.

Sector Spotlight – The utilities sector was the strongest performer in February 2026, with a 10.36% return. The energy and materials sectors were close behind, with a 9.54% and an 8.40% return, respectively.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report for March 2026 came in surprisingly strong, with payrolls growing by 178,000 (after economists predicted growth of about 65,000). Payroll growth was strongest in health care (71,000), leisure and hospitality (44,000), and construction (26,000), while it declined in the federal government (18,000).

Stock futures have slipped while Treasury yields pressed higher during Friday's holiday trading session after a hotter-than-expected jobs report raised more questions about whether the Federal Reserve will deliver an interest-rate cut this year.

Current market volatility is driven by geopolitical risks, technical breakdowns, and sentiment, decoupling equities from fundamentals. Despite near-term turbulence, high-quality tech and hardware stocks like AMD, NVDA, and CRM are trading at historically low forward P/E and PEG ratios.

Fmr. Fed Vice Chair Roger Ferguson joins 'Squawk Box' to talk the impact of a stabilizing labor market on the Federal Reserve's rate decisions moving forward.

The Labor Department reported that employers added 178,000 jobs in March, a sizeable bounce back from the losses seen in February. Gains returned to the healthcare sector, a key aspect of February's weakness.

Stock futures ticked slightly lower while investors await the Iran war's impacts.

Stock futures ticked slightly lower while investors await the Iran war's impacts.

Applied Optoelectronics stock surges on a series of data-center transceiver orders from customers like Amazon.com and Microsoft.

CNBC's Rick Santelli joins 'Squawk Box' with the March jobs report.

The Labor Department released the March jobs report on Friday which showed the economy added jobs at a solid pace last month after an unanticipated decline in February.

On Thursday, news broke that the US will likely start levying a 100% tariff on branded pharmaceutical imports. The specifics remain unclear, but the levy is expected to be relatively narrow in scope, since many exemptions have already been negotiated.

The job market rebounded in March, as employment increased by 178,000 and the unemployment rate fell slightly to 4.3%. The gains exceeded expectations, following job loss in February.

This is a developing story.

Neils Christensen has a diploma in journalism from Lethbridge College and has more than a decade of reporting experience working for news organizations throughout Canada. His experiences include covering territorial and federal politics in Nunavut, Canada.

Hiring in March was surprisingly strong, signaling the labor market was stabilizing ahead of the war in Iran.