S&P 500 Down 6.96% Year-to-Date as Oil Prices Dominate Over Slowing Economy Fears
- The S&P 500 index has declined 6.96% year-to-date through early April 2026, with the S&P 500 Growth Index dropping a steeper 11.11% amid shifting investor focus.
- Investment managers adopted defensive postures by buying U.S. Treasury bonds as economic slowdown signals emerged, though rising oil prices took center stage.
- Gold, silver, and bitcoin prices fell while crude surges from Iran conflict and distribution chokepoints overshadowed traditional safe-haven demand.
- The April economic outlook highlights oil vulnerabilities and Middle East tensions as key drags on U.S. equities and growth expectations.
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Fed Governor Barr says financial institutions should use AI and cash-flow data to improve consumer health
⢠Federal Reserve Governor Michael Barr said on Wednesday that banks and fintech firms are increasingly using transaction-account data, AI-assisted analysis and behavioral science to measure customersā financial health. ⢠Barr said these tools let institutions move beyond simply expanding access and instead design products and outreach that can produce āmeasurable improvementā in outcomes for consumers.
Read original Ā· federalreserve.govEuropean stocks advance as U.S. Iran strike pause lifts sentiment
⢠European shares moved higher on Wednesday afternoon, with Londonās FTSE 100 up 11 points to 10,335, Parisās CAC 40 up 23 points to 8,011 and Frankfurtās DAX up 200 points to 24,508 by 2:50pm. ⢠The rally came after investors welcomed news that the United States had paused an attack on Iran following Tehranās latest peace proposal, easing some geopolitical pressure.
Read original Ā· rte.ieAsian shares fall as rising bond yields and Iran war fears pressure markets
⢠Asian stocks were mostly lower on Wednesday as higher bond yields and renewed concern over the war with Iran weighed on risk assets across the region. ⢠Japanās Nikkei 225 fell 1.2% to 59,804.41, while Hong Kongās Hang Seng lost 0.7%, Australiaās S&P/ASX 200 dropped 1.3%, and South Koreaās Kospi declined 0.9%.
Read original Ā· audacy.comNo verified U.S. business news articles could be confirmed from the provided search results
⢠The only search result provided was the SEC.gov homepage, which is not a news article and does not meet the requirement for a written business or financial news story. ⢠Because no article URLs, headlines, or publication timestamps were available in the search results, I could not verify any stock, earnings, merger, economic, or Fed-related developments.
Read original Ā· sec.govDow Jones feed highlights market, earnings and Fed-related business headlines
⢠Dow Jonesā business-news feed surfaced multiple fresh U.S.-relevant market stories within the past hour, including a piece on āThe Most Brutal Car Market Is Spreading to the Rest of the Worldā and a report that Elon Musk lost his case against OpenAI after jury deliberation. ⢠Other prominently listed items include coverage of home prices and rates, with Kathie Lee Gifford seeking $100 million for her Connecticut waterfront home and Home Depot earnings due as mortgage rates hit a year-plus high.
Read original Ā· dowjones.com
Dow JonesChina's economy shows signs of strain in April as industrial output and retail sales miss forecasts
⢠Chinaās economy slowed in April, with industrial output, retail sales and fixed-asset investment all missing expectations as global energy-market volatility added pressure. ⢠Retail sales rose just 0.2% year on year, down from 1.7% in March, while industrial output increased 4.1%, below the 5.63% forecast cited by economists.
Read original Ā· scmp.comAsian stocks fall as chip shares slide after Trump-Xi trade talks
⢠Asian equities fell on Friday after a U.S. trade official said chip export controls were not discussed in detail during Thursdayās U.S.-China talks, pressuring semiconductor shares across the region. ⢠South Koreaās KOSPI led losses, dropping 6.3%, while Japanās Nikkei 225 fell 2.1%, Hong Kongās Hang Seng lost 1.6% and mainland Chinaās CSI 300 eased 0.8%.
Read original Ā· lgt.com
LGTAsian stocks rise as AI rally lifts Wall Street gauges and Treasury yields climb
⢠Asian stocks rose on Friday, with gains in Japan, South Korea and Australia pushing the MSCI Asia Pacific Index higher after Wall Street gauges hit records. ⢠The move was driven by the AI trade, strong corporate earnings and resilient U.S. consumer data, while Nvidia's six-day rally brought its market value closer to $6 trillion.
Read original Ā· moneycontrol.comAsia Overtakes Silicon Valley in Global AI Business Boom Driving Tech Stock Surge
⢠Asia has emerged as the new center of the global AI boom, surpassing Silicon Valley, fueled by surging demand for AI chips that propelled Asian tech stocks higher. ⢠The AI-driven rally boosted South Korea's Kospi to a fresh record close of 7,981.41, up 1.8%, supported by technology shares amid robust corporate results in Japan.
Read original Ā· idnfinancials.com
IDN FinancialsTrump-Xi Summit Kicks Off in Beijing as Asian Stocks Show Mixed Performance
⢠U.S. President Donald Trump met with Chinese leader Xi Jinping at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on Thursday to discuss U.S.-China relations, Taiwan, and economic cooperation, with no major breakthroughs expected by analysts. ⢠Asian markets were mixed: Japan's Nikkei 225 fell 1% to 62,654.05 after hitting an intraday record above 63,700; South Korea's Kospi rose 1.8% to a record 7,981.41 driven by AI tech stocks; Shanghai Composite dropped 1.5% to 4,177.92 while Hong Kong's Hang Seng flatlined at 26,389.04.
Read original Ā· wsls.comCitigroup Plans 10% Headcount Increase in Asia-Pacific Prime Brokerage Business
⢠Citigroup announced plans to expand its Asia-Pacific prime brokerage division by approximately 10% this year to attract more hedge fund clients amid growing regional activity. ⢠The hiring push targets capturing increased hedge fund business in APAC, a key growth area for the U.S. bank's securities services.
Read original Ā· aastocks.com
AAStocksWall Street Mixed After Disappointing Wholesale Inflation Report and Tech Recovery
⢠Wall Street traded mixed on Wednesday morning, with the S&P 500 down 0.1%, Dow Jones Industrial Average dropping 235 points or 0.5% at 9:35 a.m. ET, and Nasdaq up 0.2% amid a technology sector rebound. ⢠Tech stocks like Micron Technology surged 4.3% and Nvidia rose 2.4%, the top gainer on the S&P 500, following a pause in AI-driven momentum; Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang was invited by President Trump to discuss AI chip shipments to China.
Read original Ā· 2news.com
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