Newsquawk US Market Wrap: Stocks mixed and oil bid on mixed geopolitical reports

MARKET WRAP

MWRAP: Stocks were ultimately mixed with tech taking a hit while small caps outperformed. The day was filled with mixed messaging around geopolitics, but tech stocks were hit by software names on more private credit redemption caps from Apollo and Ares, while Claude also released a new tool, sparking renewed AI disruption concerns. Crude prices settled well in the green, paring some of the weakness on Monday, as attacks on or near Iranian nuclear sites and reports of Troop deployment added to the concerns, while there is still uncertainty about negotiations. Trump continued to sound optimistic, noting they are having tremendous success in Iran, and they are talking to the right people who want to make a deal. He suggested Iran is talking sense, and he went as far as to say he thinks they can call the new leaders a regime change, while also stating Iran sent the US a significant gift to do with the Strait of Hormuz, but without elaborating. Reports in Axios suggested that high-level US/Iran talks could take place on Thursday. Treasuries were lower across the curve, paring some of the gains on Monday, with higher oil prices weighing on the curve, while the 2-year auction was also woeful. In FX, it was a Dollar story which was largely supported by the rebound in UST yields and crude mixed geopolitical updates. Data saw a chunky revision higher to US Unit Labour Costs and mixed Flash S&P Global PMI readings, but the focus was largely on US/Iran. Gold and Silver finished little changed, while Bitcoin was hit.

US

UNIT LABOUR COSTS/PRODUCTIVITY: The Final Q4 Unit Labour costs rose 4.4%, well above the 2.8% forecast and vs the prior 1.8% decline. Nonfarm productivity, meanwhile, rose 1.8%, below the 2.8% forecast and down from the prior 5.2%. The rise in unit labour costs was led by a 6.3% increase in hourly compensation and a 1.8% increase in productivity. The increased productivity was due to a 1.5% increase in output while hours worked declined by 0.2%. The Final Q4 report may raise some fears about inflation through higher wages due to the 4.4% increase in unit labour costs, largely due to the 6.3% increase in hourly compensation. However, Fed officials continue to highlight how inflation is not being driven by employment. The main risk at the moment is a prolonged war and the impact of sustained, higher energy prices. OxEco summarised the data by saying "The upward revision to unit labor costs nudged the annual trend higher, but given the pace of productivity, they are unlikely to be a source of inflationary pressure. The depressed rate of hiring, particularly after accounting for the war in Iran, means this measure is unlikely to accelerate in the near-term."

FIXED INCOME

T-NOTE FUTURES (M6) SETTLED 16 TICKS LOWER AT 110-13+

T-notes lower as oil prices gain amid mixed geopolitical reporting. At settlement, 2-year +7.5bps at 3.931%, 3-year +7.1bps at 3.940%, 5-year +6.1bps at 4.032%, 7-year +5.9bps at 4.217%, 10-year +4.2bps at 4.392%, 20-year +2.6bps at 4.973%, 30-year +2.2bps at 4.943%.

THE DAY: T-notes were lower across the curve, paring some of the upside seen Monday as oil prices rose on uncertainty about US/Iran talks. T-notes trended lower throughout the session, driven by rising oil prices amid mixed reporting, but the sense of optimism was not as strong as on Monday. T-notes hit lows as oil hit highs after reports suggested that the US is to order 3,000 82nd airborne soldiers to the Middle East and plans to deploy the Brigade Combat Team to support Iran operations. However, a decision to put boots on the ground in Iran has not yet been made, but raises fears of a possible ground invasion. Meanwhile, on a more positive footing, reports suggested high-level US/Iran peace talks could take place on Thursday. Elsewhere, US data saw Labour Costs rise more than expected while ADP employment was little changed W/W. S&P Global Manufacturing PMI rose while Services PMI eased, seeing the composite fall slightly, but data took a back foot today with focus on geopolitics. T-notes did come under pressure in the wake of the 2-year note auction (more below), but a lot of the downside was due to the reports about soldiers in the Middle East, which hit at the same time.

SUPPLY

Notes

Bills

STIRS/OPERATIONS

CRUDE

WTI (K6) SETTLED USD 4.22 HIGHER AT USD 92.35/BBL ; BRENT (K6) SETTLED USD 4.55 HIGHER AT USD 104.49/BBL

Commentary

EQUITIES

CLOSES: SPX -0.37% at 6,556, NDX -0.77% at 24,002, DJI -0.18% at 46,124, RUT +0.45% at 2,505

SECTORS: Communication Services -2.50%, Real Estate -0.76%, Technology -0.71%, Consumer Discretionary -0.54%, Health +0.04%, Financials +0.05%, Consumer Staples +0.08%, Industrials +0.57%, Utilities +0.74%, Materials +1.67%, Energy +2.05%.

EUROPEAN CLOSES: Euro Stoxx 50 -0.08% at 5,570, Dax 40 -0.06% at 22,640, FTSE 100 +0.72% at 9,965, CAC 40 +0.23% at 7,744, FTSE MIB +0.42% at 43,370, IBEX 35 +0.13% at 16,910, PSI +1.18% at 8,882, SMI +1.04% at 12,519, AEX +0.78% at 974

STOCK SPECIFICS

FX

The Dollar was firmer against all G10 peers as the developments on the US-Iran "talks" showed little progress from Trump's announcement on Monday. CNN suggest Iran has received a US "outreach" and is willing to listen. Despite further reporting of talks potentially occurring between this week via mediators, the WSJ notes that the US has ordered 3k 82nd airborne soldiers to the Middle East to deploy Brigade combat team to support Iran operations. Moreover, overnight reports that US-Iran attacks on Gas-related facilities were hit in strikes on Isfahan put a dent in Trump's supposed five-day grace period of attacks on energy facilities. USD continued to show a positive correlation with oil amid the rise in treasury yields in the background. Adding to inflation concerns on the upside was the chunky revision to Unit Labor Cost Q/Q (Q4) to 4.4% (exp. 2.8%, prev. -1.8%). Further, commentary from the mixed S&P Global Flash March report (Mfg beat, svs missed), said gauges point to consumer price inflation accelerating back to around 4%, hinting at a growing risk of the US moving into an environment of stagflation." DXY rose to ~99.39, short of the 99.68 seen at the start of the week.

G10 FX was entirely in the red, with weakness most significant in the NZD, CHF, and AUD, while the EUR relatively outperformed. EUR/USD was subdued within a 1.1557–1.1618 range, after finding resistance around its 21 DMA (1.1617). Eurozone PMIs offered little in terms of a reaction, but the commentary was similar to that of the US PMI report, pointing to a stagflationary economy.

24 Mar 2026 - 20:13- Fixed IncomeGeopolitical- Source: Newsquawk

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