Week in Review: April 3, 2026

April 7, 2026

Recap & Commentary

Markets rebounded during the holiday‑shortened week as easing treasury yields and hopes for a diplomatic off‑ramp in the Iran conflict fueled a relief rally following five straight weeks of declines. Despite the bounce, major indexes remain lower year‑to‑date following a difficult first quarter marked by geopolitical risk and resurgent inflation concerns. Early in the week equity markets were volatile amid continued uncertainty surrounding Middle East hostilities and elevated energy prices, but sentiment improved after comments from President Trump signaled a willingness to de‑escalate should shipping lanes in the Strait of Hormuz reopen. Reports later in the week that Iranian leadership was open to ending hostilities added to the risk‑on tone, helping major indexes snap multi‑week losing streaks.

Energy markets remained a central focus, with crude prices swinging sharply on geopolitical headlines. WTI Crude jumped to start the week, opening above $100/barrel though gave back most of those gains on talk of negotiations. Prices resumed their climb later in the week as skepticism around a sustained ceasefire persisted. WTI Crude settled around $112 a barrel, reinforcing concerns that prolonged supply disruptions could keep inflation elevated and complicate the Federal Reserve’s longer‑term policy outlook.

Overall, the week reflected a tactical relief rally rather than a clear shift in trend, as investors continue to navigate a fragile backdrop defined by geopolitical risk, volatile energy markets, and uncertainty around the future path of inflation and monetary policy. Attention now turns to incoming labor market data and inflation releases for clarity on whether recent market stabilization can be sustained in the weeks ahead.

Economic Commentary

The March Employment Report showed nonfarm payrolls rising by 178,000, well above consensus expectations following February’s sharp decline. The unemployment rate edged down to 4.3%, though the improvement was largely driven by a decline in labor force participation rather than stronger labor demand. Wage growth continued to decelerate, with average hourly earnings rising just 0.2% month‑over‑month and 3.5% year‑over‑year, the slowest annual pace since 2021. Signs of softening labor demand were further evident in the February JOLTS report, which showed job openings slipping to 6.9 million, down from January, while the hiring rate fell to 3.1%, its lowest level since April 2020. The quits rate remained subdued at 1.9%, underscoring reduced worker confidence and limited job mobility. While layoffs remain contained, the drop in hiring points to diminished labor market dynamism entering the second quarter, a trend the Federal Reserve continues to monitor closely.

In the manufacturing sector, activity continued to improve modestly. The ISM Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.7 in March, its highest reading since August 2022, marking a third consecutive month in expansion territory. Production and new orders remained above 50, signaling underlying demand resilience. However, employment within manufacturing stayed in contraction, and the prices paid index surged to 78.3, its highest level since mid‑2022.

Consumer spending data offered a relatively brighter spot. Retail sales rose 0.6% in February, rebounding from January’s decline and exceeding expectations. Core retail sales increased 0.5%, indicating continued household spending momentum.

On Note

Fed Chair Jerome Powell noted last week that he could remain on the Federal Reserve Board even after his term as Chair expires. He would be the first Fed Chair to remain on the Board after stepping down since Marriner Eccles in 1948.

Market Indices (As of 04/03/2026)

S&P 500 3.4%
Small Caps 3.3%
Intl. Developed 3.0%
Intl. Emerging 0.3%
Commodities 2.3%
U.S. Bond Market 0.75%
10-Year Treas. Yield 4.32%
U.S. Dollar -0.12%
WTI Oil ($/bl) $112
Gold ($/oz) $4,639

The Week Ahead

  • Consumer Inflation (CPI)
  • Core PCE Inflation
  • ISM Services
  • Durable Good Orders
  • Initial Jobless Claims

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