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CNBC's “Morning Call” delivers the essential market intelligence that drives the trading day ahead. Morgan Brennan anchors CNBC's new business news show "Morning Call" beginning Monday, March 23 at 5am ET.

The Fed brought up the Middle East in the FOMC statement yesterday and even raised inflation forecasts. Is the monetary easing cycle over?

Geopolitical escalation in the Middle East has driven a sharp spike in Brent crude, with WTI remaining below $100, insulating the U.S. economy somewhat. The Federal Reserve maintained rates, raised its year-end inflation target to 2.7%, and expects only one rate cut in 2024 amid persistent inflation pressures.

As of March 19, 2026, two stocks in the industrials sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

The number of people who filed for unemployment benefits was 205,000 in the week through March 14, lower than the 213,000 reported a week earlier.

The Citrini selloff wasn't panic — it was an X-ray. The ‘smart money' is quietly exiting tech sectors AI is disrupting.

Job layoff announcements soared in 2025, up 58% from 2024. January's figures were high, though February 2026 came in low, according to Challenger, Gray and Christmas.

Bonds have been far from boring this year — at least compared with the S&P 500. And investors are piling into bond ETFs as a result.

U.S. Treasury yields rose across the curve on Thursday, with yields on short-term bonds spiking as inflation fears hung over global markets.

Indian stocks had their worst day in nearly two years as risk-off sentiment swept the market, spearhead by escalating fighting in the Middle East.

Wall Street Journal chief economics correspondent Nick Timiraos warns rising oil, persistent inflation and Fed uncertainty could delay rate cuts and threaten economic growth. 0:00 Market Alert: Yields Spike as Powell Speaks 1:10 Jay Powell: "I Have No Intention of Leaving" 3:05 The DOJ Probe & The Kevin Warsh Deadlock 4:45 Senator Kevin Cramer on the Confirmation Pause 5:50 $115 Oil: Will the Energy Shock Trigger a Recession?

There are a few under-the-surface factors that are supporting the stock market.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

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

Plus, oil hits $115.

Stocks sold off and short-term Treasury yields rose after oil surged beyond $113 a barrel as attacks on Middle East energy infrastructure intensified.

Wall Street's main indexes were set to open lower on Thursday as crude prices soared on intensifying Middle East hostilities, reviving inflation worries that have prompted the Federal Reserve to take a more cautious stance on interest rate cuts.

Many fund managers, journalists, and investment advisors continue debating whether the run on private credit funds is merely a hiccup in a maturing industry or the beginning of a panic that is likely to accelerate rapidly. It seems nearly all investors assume that alternative asset classes are permanent, large-scale features of capital markets, but historically this has never been the case.

In a survey, the average of economists projects the Mideast war boosting inflation but probably not hurting growth.

The national average gas price rose once again on Thursday, touching $3.884, according to AAA's fuel price tracker, a 32.5% increase from the previous month. The national average price of Diesel nearly reached $5.10 early on Thursday, just two days after breaching $5.