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The risks to the U.S. economy suggest that interest rates may need to be lower or higher, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said Monday.
Share of Alcoa surged Monday, heading toward their best day in months, as aluminum became the next commodity to have its moment after two large Middle East facilities were hit with Iranian missiles over the weekend.

When a new technology captures the market's imagination, investors tend to respond in two ways. They rush to identify the winners and just as quickly write off the losers.

Technical indicators for Pfizer and GSK have turned bullish.

Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran continued his campaign for lower interest rates, telling CNBC that policymakers should disregard the current energy price spike. He told CNBC that he continues to think "we could be about a point easier, gradually done over the course of a year.

Cybersecurity stocks are trading higher today as the sector rebounds following Friday's selloff tied to concerns that Anthropic's Claude Mythos AI tool could identify and exploit software vulnerabilities.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell speaks at a discussion at Harvard University.

US stocks opened higher on Monday, rebounding after sharp losses in the previous session, as investors reacted to fresh developments in the Middle East conflict and comments from Donald Trump on ongoing negotiations with Iran. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was up 333 points, or 0.74%, while the S&P 500 gained 0.63% and the Nasdaq 100 rose 0.60%.

The S&P 500 has dropped for four consecutive weeks, coinciding with the market-moving geopolitical event of the Iran war that began on 28 February 2026. In the fourth week since the Iran war began, the index dropped 2.1% to close out the week at 6,368.85.

Kevin Hincks is back on the Opening Bell to talk with investors about the U.S.-Iran War uncertainties, including crude oil's impact on the inflation picture. He says the economy is "still doing quite well" even with the volatility and recent SaaS-pocalypse leaving stocks scarred.

The Pentagon is preparing for targeted ground operations in Iran, raising the risk of broader conflict and market volatility. Energy prices are spiking as the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked, threatening global economic stability and increasing recession risks.

What's unusual today is the degree of divergence between individual stocks and the cap-weighted index. The single most damaging decision most investors make during periods of falling stock market breadth is selling.

Stock futures are rising to open the holiday-shortened trading week after five straight weeks of losses for major indexes; President Donald Trump told The Financial Times he would prefer to take oil out of Iran, which would likely mean a ground operation that could extend the war significantly; the president is also reportedly considering using ground troops to find and extract hundreds of pounds of uranium from Iran as a means of taking away its capability to create a nuclear weapon; earnings from Nike and the March jobs report will be in focus this week; and Eli Lilly has signed a deal with Insilico Medicine, an AI drug development company. Here's what you need to know today.

Bond yields are falling as focus turns to the growth risks from a protracted conflict in the Middle East conflict and expectations for higher interest rates cool. Bloomberg's Morwenna Coniam joined "The Opening Trade" to discuss.

“In the short term, I think it's really quite simple that the dollar has been used as a safe haven,” says Jane Foley, head of FX strategy at Rabobank, as she examines the global FX market amid the war in Iran. -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?

Economic sentiment and consumer confidence plummeted in Europe in March, according to the latest flash data released on Monday. European growth and inflation prospects have been upended by the Iran war, which has now entered its fifth week.

US stock futures were pointing to a firmer open on Monday, as oil price rises were small and bond markets eased slightly, despite more mixed messages on the fifth week of the war in the Middle East from Donald Trump and Iranian officials. Dow Jones, S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures were all up around 0.6%, after a week of heavy selling left all three indices nursing losses of between 2.8% and 5.25%.

March was a big disappointment for most S&P 500 investors. But some stocks not only avoided much of the pain — they thrived.

Oil executives see higher prices, March jobs data expected to show improvement, SpaceX reminds us disruption is coming, and more news to start your day.

Ignore the bears, says the hedge-fund billionaire