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Markets look at geopolitical risks as temporary shocks, says Brandon Clark, urging investors to use history as guide. He explains how the current conflict in Iran compares to other geopolitical conflicts like the Iraq War and how price action will likely be more resilient than expected.

The S&P 500 declined 2.0% from its previous week's close to end the trading week at 6,740.02. Although geopolitics delivered the week's biggest news, other news influenced investor expectations of the future as well.

The latest U.S. jobs report is out, and it isn't pretty. The economy lost 92,000 jobs in February, missing expectations, as unemployment rose to 4.4%, according to data from the Labor Department.

Thematic exchange-traded fund assets in the U.S. have surged from $22 billion in 2015 to over $193 billion today, but not all thematic funds deliver on their promises, according to a new FactSet analysis.

The rise in yields comes as oil prices hover above the $100 mark.

The S&P 500 closed at 6,740 on Friday, its lowest level since mid-December, as technical deterioration, collapsing payrolls, and $90 oil converged on the charts. For longer-term investors, key support and resistance levels are worth watching.

Steve Hanke, market analyst and professor of applied economics, discussed the rising oil prices and escalating tensions in the Middle East, which could trigger broader economic damage through financial markets.

I have pivoted away from Ray Dalio's All-Weather Portfolio (AWP) since 2020 due to concerns over treasury allocations. The market conditions we face now are vastly different compared to those under which the AWP was conceived.

Central banks across Europe came under market pressure on Monday to lift interest rates as the war in Iran drove up energy costs and revived the spectre of another inflation wave.

During times of turbulence and uncertainty in the markets, many investors turn to dividend-yielding stocks. These are often companies that have high free cash flows and reward shareholders with a high dividend payout.

The current market anxiety over Iran-driven oil shocks and stagflation risks is generating attractive buying opportunities in cyclical value stocks. I remain bullish on sectors, like transportation, basic materials, energy, and housing, despite recent sharp pullbacks in names, such as ODFL, QXO, and CSL.

The ‘Fear & Greed Index' for the U.S. stock market dropped to a reading of 26 – just one point short of ‘extreme fear' – at press time on March 9, 2026, per the data Finbold retrieved from CNN on the day.

The U.S.-Iran conflict has severely disrupted oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz, triggering production cuts and storage constraints across Gulf states. Oil futures spiked 15%, hitting $100, but extreme volatility and risk make oil futures and ETFs unattractive at current levels.

Surging oil prices are upending the stock market. But so far, one sector seems to be getting hit harder than others—the travel industry.

Nasdaq sought approval in September to let investors trade tokenized versions of its listed stocks and other exchange-traded products.

Plus, oil smashes past $100 a barrel.

The most oversold stocks in the information technology sector presents an opportunity to buy into undervalued companies.

Investors sold government bonds and the Swiss franc rose to its highest level against the euro since 2015 on safe-haven demand.

U.S. stocks settled lower on Friday, with the Dow Jones index falling more than 450 points during the session.

The Finance Ministers of the G7 countries and International Energy Agency (IEA) Executive Director Fatih Birol will hold a call at 8:30 a.m. E.T. on Monday to discuss a coordinated release of their strategic petroleum reserves, according to FT's report.