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Here are five key things investors need to know to start the trading day.

ADP said U.S. businesses create 109,000 new jobs in April — the biggest increase in 15 months — in a sign a partly frozen labor market might be thawing out after months of unusually tepid hiring.

During Q1, the Middle East conflict materially impacted the macro environment and equity return trends. Unlike in Q4, larger equities were not consistently favored, which may reflect the change of leadership seen during the quarter with the macro shock and Tech moderation.

Private companies added 109,000 jobs for the month, a step up from the 61,000 created in March and better than the Dow Jones consensus estimate for 84,000, ADP reported Wednesday. Education and health services again dominated, adding 61,000 jobs.

China A50 shows strong resilience and leadership: The index has gained ~7% since late February 2026 and outperformed global peers during the US-Iran conflict, remaining largely stable during broader market sell-offs. Macro tailwinds and geopolitical positioning: A tariff truce and upcoming Trump-Xi meeting (14-15 May) are key catalysts, while a strengthening yuan and China's strategic stance on energy and AI supply chains continue to support equity upside.

Saks Global Enterprises LLC may soon emerge from bankruptcy with less debt, fresh capital and a much smaller store base.

The Project Freedom was likely an initial attempt to open the Strait of Hormuz by force, and it failed. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed, with no end in sight, which increases the probability of an inflationary recession with each passing day.

US futures point to a strong open, extending a global rally driven by hopes of a breakthrough in the Middle East, with further fuel from strong results from AMD and Super Micro Computer overnight. The Dow Jones has been called more than 500 points higher, with futures up 1%, while futures for the S&P 500 are up 0.9%.

Stocks have been rallying lately, with the S&P 500 Index (SPX) gaining over 10% over the course of a month for the first time in about a year (not using calendar months, but rather any 21-trading day period).

Payment technology company Global Payments reported a rise in first-quarter adjusted profit on Wednesday, helped by resilient consumer spending despite geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and a volatile economic backdrop.

Iran's Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps navy has announced the strait of Hormuz could reopen following the end of ‘threats from aggressors'

Wells Fargo strategists say some factors that have been driving the market higher are played out.

Oil prices slumped and global stocks surged after reports that the U.S. and Iran were nearing a one-page memorandum to end the war in the Gulf. That news came shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump said he would pause his operation to reopen Gulf shipping, just days after so-called ‘Project Freedom' began.

Torgrim Reitan, CFO of Norwegian energy giant Equinor, joins Europe Early Edition to discuss Q1 earnings, with profit rising more-than-expected amid tailwinds from higher output and oil prices.

U.S. stocks are outpacing their global rivals, with tech leading the charge. But worries about the war in Iran still linger.

Plus, a new trillion dollar baby.

The release of transcripts of Federal Reserve rate-setting meetings, a cornerstone of its transparency for more than 30 years, undermines the debate needed to set good monetary policy, incoming U.S. central bank chief Kevin Warsh says in an upcoming book, remarks that echo his wider desire to overhaul the Fed.

Stocks and bonds rallied on Wednesday while the US dollar weakened after a report suggested the United States and Iran were moving closer to an agreement aimed at ending the war, triggering a sharp decline in oil prices. According to a report by Axios, the US and Iran are nearing a one-page memorandum that could potentially end the conflict.

US stock index futures climbed on Wednesday morning as a standout earnings beat from Advanced Micro Devices drove a 15% surge in after-hours trading, adding further momentum to a market that closed at record highs the previous session. A sharp retreat in oil prices provided another tailwind, with Brent crude dropping toward 96 dollars a barrel in pre-market hours as Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth insisted the US-Iran ceasefire remained intact, even as skirmishes in the Strait of Hormuz continued.

The 2026 U.S. merchandise trade deficit fell to its lowest level since the first quarter of 2020, as exports increased 15.37% and imports fell 13.89%, according to my analysis of Census Bureau data released yesterday. Overall U.S. trade is down also, off 3.50%, not unsual when the deficit declines.