Week in Review: March 9, 2026

March 9, 2026

Recap & Commentary

Markets ended the week lower, with the S&P 500 suffering its worst week since October, as events in the Middle East continued to unfold. The selloff was further exacerbated by the weak February jobs report which, combined with higher energy prices, reignited stagflation concerns. With few signs of a let up in the Middle East fighting, oil prices jumped 36%, their largest weekly increase on record. In the US, according to AAA, the national average for a gallon of unleaded gasoline rose from $2.98 to $3.32. Though geopolitical events often have a fleeting impact on markets, the current conflict has the potential to be different due to the significant supply of energy products that move through the Straits of Hormuz, which Iran has effectively closed. Should the fighting conclude relatively soon, and energy prices return to prior levels, the economic impact will be limited. However, should the fighting drag on, and energy prices remain elevated for an extended period, that could put upward pressure on inflation, a concern for both consumers and the Federal Reserve.

The specter of higher inflation and weaker labor markets, as suggested by the February employment report, leaves the Fed in a difficult position regarding its dual mandate of price stability and maximizing employment. For now, markets seem to think the potential for higher inflation is the Fed’s greater concern. Prior to the outbreak of fighting, markets were pricing in a 57% chance of a June rate cut, and 44% chance of three rate cuts by year end. By Friday, the odds of a June rate cut had fallen to 33%, and the odds of three rate cut by year end had dropped to 17%.

Concerns about the private credit industry continued to swirl, after BlackRock announced it is limiting client redemptions in one of its largest private credit funds to 5%, despite aggregate shareholder requests of 9.3%.

Economic Commentary

Nonfarm payrolls unexpectedly shed 92K jobs in February, the largest monthly decline since October and second largest since 2020. Unemployment rose 0.1% to 4.4%. Following average monthly jobs losses of ~8K over second half of 2025, the 130K new jobs reported in January spurred hopes that 2026 would see accelerated hiring. The February report dampened that enthusiasm, making the January additions look more like an outlier than then the start of a new trend.

Data from industry group Institute for Supply Management (ISM) showed better-than-expected growth in both the manufacturing and services sectors in February. Manufacturing expanded for the second consecutive month, the first such occurrence since 2022. New orders and backlog orders were also both positive for a second consecutive month, suggesting a sustained uptick in demand. Employment continued to decline, but did so at its slowest pace since January 2025. Notably input prices accelerated at their fastest pace since 2022, suggesting further upward pressure on inflation. Service sector activity expanded at its fastest pace since 2022. New orders and employment both expanded during the month. Unlike manufacturing, the pace of price increases slowed to an 11-month low.

Headline retail sales fell 0.2% in January, led by a 0.9% decline in motor vehicles and auto parts. Control sales, a more nuanced measure of retail sales, used to calculate GDP rose 0.3% suggesting modest consumer spending to begin the year.

Of Note

Follow a ruling by the U.S. Court of International Trade ordering the government to refund tariffs to importers, the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Agency said it expects to begin doing so within 45 days.

Market Indices (As of 02/27/2026)

S&P 500 -2.0%
Small Caps -4.1%
Intl. Developed -6.8%
Intl. Emerging -6.9%
Commodities 8.1%
U.S. Bond Market -1.0%
10-Year Treas. Yield 4.13
U.S. Dollar 1.3%
WTI Oil ($/bl) $97
Gold ($/oz) $5,181

The Week Ahead

  • Consumer Inflation (CPI)
  • Core PCE Inflation
  • Consumer Sentiment
  • Durable Goods Orders
  • Existing Home Sales
  • Housing Starts
  • Initial Jobless Claims

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