Key Highlights
- Critical inflation metrics for March CPI and February PCE expected this week, marking initial readings post-Iran conflict
- March employment data showed 178,000 new positions, surpassing forecasted 65,000
- Crude oil has surged more than 50% following conflict outbreak, pushing national gas average above $4
- Delta Air Lines scheduled to release results Wednesday, offering insight into fuel cost pressures on aviation sector
- Major market indices snapped five consecutive weeks of declines, posting gains exceeding 3%
Investors face a packed schedule as crucial economic indicators, quarterly corporate results, and evolving geopolitical tensions converge this week.
Last week saw the S&P 500 climb 1.6%, while the Dow Jones advanced 1.2% and the Nasdaq Composite surged 2.2%. These gains marked the end of five straight weeks of losses across all three benchmarks. Year-to-date, the S&P 500 and Dow remain negative, down 3.8% and 3.2% respectively.
Friday’s employment report for March significantly exceeded analyst projections. Nonfarm payrolls expanded by 178,000 positions, crushing consensus estimates of 65,000. This represented a sharp reversal from February’s contraction of 92,000 jobs.
“The key message here is equilibrium,” noted Gina Bolvin, president of Bolvin Wealth Management Group. “Robust job creation diminishes pressure for immediate rate reductions, though it doesn’t alter the overall moderation pattern.”
Michael Feroli, JPMorgan Chase’s chief US economist, suggested the data provided “somewhat greater assurance that the economy can navigate the current energy price disruption without substantial lasting harm.”
Key Inflation Metrics Command Attention
Thursday delivers the February Personal Consumption Expenditures index, a critical gauge of price pressures closely monitored by Federal Reserve policymakers. Forecasters anticipate a 0.4% monthly advance and a 2.8% annual increase.
Friday presents the more significant release: March’s Consumer Price Index. Analysts project a 0.9% monthly jump from February and a 3.4% yearly gain. February’s CPI registered 2.4% on an annual basis. This upcoming report will provide the first comprehensive assessment of how the Iran conflict has influenced consumer prices.
National gasoline prices breached the $4-per-gallon threshold last week, based on AAA tracking data. Goldman Sachs analyst Ben Shumway observed that escalating costs are “contributing to a further decline in consumer sentiment from already depressed levels.”
Andy Schneider, senior US economist at BNP Paribas, noted that “the disruption affecting the Strait of Hormuz has materialized while tariff impacts continue to work through the system,” emphasizing that “the initial wave of oil price transmission will have manifested in March data.”
Manuel Abecasis from Goldman Sachs characterized the current supply disruption as “less troubling than previous incidents that triggered inflation challenges,” pointing to its constrained scale and scope.
Corporate Results and Geopolitical Developments
Delta Air Lines unveils quarterly performance Wednesday morning before market opening. The carrier’s financial outcome will illuminate how elevated jet fuel expenses are impacting the broader airline sector. Constellation Brands and Levi Strauss are also scheduled to announce results during the week.
#earnings for the week of April 6, 2026 https://t.co/hLn2sKQhEY $APLD $STZ $AEHR $DAL $BB $SMPL $GBX $LEVI $NEOG $KRUS $SKIL $WDFC $RELL $ERGP $LOT $XELB $RPM $SLP $CLIR $EVO $IQST $BYRN $PXED pic.twitter.com/aKqX72tj9u
— Earnings Whispers (@eWhispers) April 2, 2026
Street analysts are forecasting earnings expansion exceeding 13% for S&P 500 constituents overall, per FactSet data.
Oil prices have climbed over 50% since hostilities commenced five weeks earlier. Maritime traffic navigating the Strait of Hormuz has fallen to nearly zero. President Trump conducted a press briefing Monday alongside military leadership as a self-imposed deadline for reopening the strategic waterway draws near.
Daniela Hathorn, analyst at Capital.com, observed that “investors have shifted from pricing in potential de-escalation scenarios to assessing the likelihood of further escalation.”
Paola Rodriguez-Masiu, chief oil analyst at Rystad Energy, indicated that the temporary cushion which had contained prices using pre-conflict petroleum inventories is now exhausted.
Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s March policy session are scheduled for release Wednesday at 2 p.m. ET. Market participants broadly anticipate the central bank will maintain current interest rate levels at its upcoming meeting later this month.
