Closing Recap
Thursday, March 12, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | -739.66 | 1.56% | 46,677 |
S&P 500 | -103.24 | 1.52% | 6,672 |
Nasdaq | -404.16 | 1.78% | 22,311 |
Russell 2000 | -53.88 | 2.12% | 2,489 |
US equities faded again overnight as there appears to be a shortage of good news. The Iran conflict has, if anything, widened and oil prices are popping again as concerns grow about a more significant curtailment of supply and potential infrastructure attacks. In economics, CPI did little to boost stocks yesterday but didn’t blow them up either. In sentiment, the bull-bear spread hit -14.5% this week versus -2.4% last week as bulls dipped from 33.1% to 31.9% while bears climbed from 35.5% to 46.4%. Meanwhile, the Fear & Greed Index slipped to 23/100 (Extreme Fear) from 28 (Fear) last week and 38 (Fear) last month. Mid-morning breadth favored decliners by 7:2 as small caps underperformed with IWM (-2.28%) versus SPY (-1.15%) and QQQ (-1.42%). Among sector ETFs, Utilities (+1.58%), Energy (+1.04%) and Consumer Staples (+0.18%) were early outperformers while Consumer Discretionary (-1.54%), Technology (-1.64%) and Industrials (-1.92%) led the underperformers with only three sectors gaining versus eight declining. The gap between top and bottom sector breadth was quite stark with all 31 Utilities in the S&P 500 in the green versus only 7 of 48 Consumer Discretionary names gained.
In data of note today, a Reuters poll noted 63 of 96 economists see the Fed cutting rates by 25 bps next quarter, though traders are no longer fully pricing in a cut in 2026. The Reuters poll, though, did indicate the majority of economists saw the Fed as more likely to hold rates longer than they expect. On growth and inflation, Goldman trimmed its growth projection for 2026 and upped its inflation forecast on the recent pop in oil prices. The firm boosted its December 2026 headline PCE projection by 80bps to 2.9% and core PCE projections by 20bps to 2.4% while trimming its 2026 GDP growth estimated by 30bps to 2.2% on a Q4/Q4 basis.
Heading into the final hour of trading, US equities were fading and holding near lows of the day. Breadth had weakened to about 4:1 in favor of decliners and only two of eleven S&P sector ETFs remained higher (Energy and Utilities) as Iran and oil headlines have been dominant drivers. With earnings largely in the rearview, PCE data will likely take an even more prominent position tomorrow as Fed cuts are feeling less probable. Stay tuned.
Weekly Sentiment data: 1) The bull-bear spread in the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) weekly survey was -14.5% vs -2.4% last week. Bulls fall to 31.9% from 33.1%, Neutrals fall to 21.7% from 31.4%, Bears rise to 46.4% from 35.5%. 2) This week’s NAAIM Exposure Index fell to 66.99 from 79.29 last week - first Reading in the 60s since 4-30-25 - the 10-29-25 Reading of 100.83 was the highest since 7-3-24 - 2025 trough from 4-16-25 of 35.16 - Last Quarter Average (Q4) of 92.26.
Economic Data
- Weekly Jobless Claims fell to 213,000 in the latest week from 214,000 prior and consensus 215,000; the 4-week moving average fell to 212,000 from 216,000 prior week (previous 215,750); continued claims fell to 1.850M from 1.871M prior week but in-line with consensus.
- January Housing Starts rose +7.2% M/M to 1.487M seasonal annual rate, vs. 1.340M consensus and 1.387M prior (revised from 1.404M), while Building permits fell -5.4% M/M to 1.376M annual rate vs. 1.410M consensus and 1.455M in December (revised from 1.448M). Jan single-family starts -2.8% to 935,000 unit rate; multifamily +29.9% to 552,000 unit rate.
- The US trade deficit dropped by over 25% in January, falling to $54.5 billion vs. $67.9B consensus to start 2026 but following increases in the previous two months. The figure fell markedly from $72.9 billion in December, which was revised from $70.3 billion. Jan goods deficit $81.79B, services surplus $27.34B.
Commodities, Currencies & Treasuries
- April gold futures gained slightly overnight but followed equities lower early and never fully recovered as investors became less comfortable pricing in Fed rate cuts this year. A strong Dollar also was unfavorable as gold’s safe-haven allure was unable to offset the downward pressures. Futures settled -$53.30/oz, or -1.03%, at $5,125.80. May Silver settles -$0.42/oz, or -0.49%, at $85.11.
- April WTI crude futures gained overnight following ongoing attacks in the strait of Hormuz then extended gains as Iran’s Supreme Leader said the strait should remain closed. Later headlines noting half of all LNG carriers are trapped in the gulf and Norwegian flagged ships will not be permitted to enter the strait also applied upward pressure on futures. Only comments from Iran indicating they have not been putting mines in the strait helped stem the gains. Still, futures settled +$8.48/bbl, or +9.72%, at $95.73.
- Rising Treasury yields didn’t help markets either with the 10-year yield topping 4.25% after dropping below the 4% level just days before the U.S. went to war with Iran. The U.S. dollar rose against the euro for a third straight day, inching closer to its strongest levels this year around $1.15 as surging energy prices sparked worries about Europe's import-dependent economy. The dollar has risen by more than 1.5% against a basket of major currencies and is close to its highest level since November, thanks in part to its safe-haven appeal.
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | 8.48 | 95.73 |
Brent | 8.48 | 100.46 |
Gold | -53.30 | 5,125.80 |
EUR/USD | -0.005 | 1.1515 |
JPY/USD | 0.43 | 159.38 |
10-Year Note | 0.045 | 4.253% |
Sector News Breakdown
Retail, Consumer Staples & Restaurants:
- In Discount Retailers: DG Q4 comp sales 4.3% tops 3.34% estimate on better EPS of $1.93 beat estimates of $1.65, helped by holiday season sales, but shares fell as the dollar store forecast annual comp sales to grow 2.2%-2.7%, below estimates of 2.48% at midpoint, and annual EPS seen $7.10-$7.35 mostly in line with ests.
- Apparel Retail: GIII shares sunk as Q4 sales fell -8.1% y/y to $772M (vs. est. $792M), reflecting lost PVH-licensed volume and a softer consumer environment and swung to a GAAP net loss of $32M after showing a profit of $49M y/y; guides FY27 EPS $2.00-$2.10, below consensus $2.93; said saw a negative impact of the Saks Global bankruptcy and is working through the exit of the Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger businesses.
- In Food Sector: Wells Fargo downgraded shares of three food names, CAG, GIS and CPB to Underweight citing their higher leverage and dividend payout ratios as well as earnings risk. The firm says the convergence of earnings risk, higher leverage and tight dividends will likely drive share underperformance relative to peers.
- In Footwear: CROX was upgraded to Hold from Sell at Williams Trading with $84 tgt citing cites valuation for the though believes Crocs' fiscal 2026 revenue and margin results will likely fall short of guidance again.
- In Sporting Goods retail: DKS reported adjusted EPS of $3.45 a share, easily topping the $2.99 consensus as sales rose to $6.23B, above consensus of $6.07B, while comp sales (not including Foot Locker yet), rose 3.1%, beating Wall Street's forecast of 2%; FY EPS guide was below views, but revs above views.
Autos, Leisure, Gaming & Lodging:
- In Autos: Honda (HMC) warned that it would tumble to a full-year loss, hit by restructuring to the tune of $15.7B at its EV business in the next few years. Honda said it expects to take a hit of 2.5 trillion yen ($15.7B) over the next few years to restructure the EV business and now expects to lose as much as 570B yen ($3.6B) in the year to the end of March, versus a previous forecast for a profit of 550B yen.
Energy
- In Oil sector: OXY was double upgraded to overweight from Underweight at Wells Fargo with a $69 price target saying the company's peer-leading oil sensitivity is both an opportunity and a risk, but it's primarily Permian capital efficiency trends informing this rating change. Piper also upgraded OXY to Overweight, as well as MUR and raise price tgts for the sector as it increases its mid-cycle WTI price forecast to $75/bbl (from $70) along with its Macro Research team to account for a more than 2 mmbbls/d swing in its FY26 crude balances.
- In Refiners: Goldman Sachs raises their crack spread estimates for Brent from ~$19 per bbl in 2026/2027/2028 to ~$22/~$20/~$20 per bbl, respectively. While they recognize there is less upside to the group following strong outperformance YTD, they ee upside to 2026-2028 consensus estimates and remain constructive on long-term fundamentals. Within refiners, Buy VLO, MPC, and DINO Within US majors and Canadian Oils, favor Buy-rated COP (on CL), CVX, CVE, SU, and CNQ. Finally, within E&Ps, lean into OVV and PR.
Banks, Brokers, Asset Managers:
- Private credit: MS is the latest capping redemptions from one of its private credit funds, returning less than half of the capital that investors sought to cash out. North Haven Private Income Fund, which has almost $8B in total investments, returned around $169M, or 45.8% of investors’ Q1 tender requests. The fund is limiting quarterly redemptions to 5% of shares outstanding, while investors asked to repurchase about 11% of shares, Bloomberg reported https://tinyurl.com/5a8re3v8 . Also, OWL defended its recent sale of $1.4 billion of loans from three of its funds, arguing the transaction contained no backstops or hidden incentives. Note over the last few weeks, private equity funds of BLK, BX and OWL have faced surges in withdrawal requests at similar funds. Note yesterday Private credit lender Cliffwater limited redemptions from its marquee $33B fund in Q1 after withdrawal requests surged to 14% of its shares, in the latest sign of investor unease with the sector.
- Big bank capital requirements will fall slightly under revised drafts of sweeping new rules, Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman said on Thursday, in a major victory for Wall Street lenders that had faced double-digit hikes under a 2023 plan. Separately, in financials, @Bluekurtic noted, “the XLF is near an oversold signal for first time since Apr 2025. $SPX financial sector ETF has gone 231 days without RSI falling below 30, the 9th longest streak since 1999. In 8 prior cases, $XLF was higher 1 month later 7 times, with an avg gain of 2.7%.”
Biotech & Pharma:
- LLY issued a public warning about potential safety risks associated with compounded tirzepatide mixed with vitamin B12. Lilly tested compounded products and found “significant levels of an impurity” that results from a chemical reaction between the vitamin and tirzepatide, the active ingredient in the drugmaker’s blockbuster weight-loss drug Zepbound.
- In Healthcare Services/Managed Care: CVS was upgraded to Outperform at Bernstein and modestly increasing its PT to $94 which presents 23% upside saying they see CVS as having attractive exposure to the MA turnaround and potential for more stable earnings in its pharmacy and PBM businesses after PBM reform impacts. CI was also upgraded to Outperform at Bernstein with $358 tgt (up from $307) sees PBM reform (PBM Bill and FTC settlement) as clearing events for PBMs that will increase the CI multiple over time.
- Animal Health sector: WOOF shares surged on results and guidance while Jefferies upgraded from Hold to Buy saying Petco enters F26 headed towards growth with liquidity and profitability concerns now in the rear view mirror; co guided FY revs flat to +1.5% vs est +0.6% and adj EBITDA $415-430 vs est $415.48Mm.
Transports
- In Industrials: GNRC was downgraded to Neutral from Buy at Citigroup and removing 90-day positive catalyst watch saying the stock's catalysts have played out after the company's 2026 revenue guidance met its above-consensus numbers and the firm now sees limited upside to 2026 estimates and no share catalysts.
- In Airlines: Jefferies lowered its price tgts on AAL to $12 from $15, DAL to $72 from $84, LUV to $41 from $48 and UAL to $125 from $148 saying jet fuel prices are up about 50% from the January average when U.S. airlines initiated guidance. On average, the firm raised its Q1 fuel cost estimates by about 14% and Q2 by about 30%, but given the volatility, it currently assumes second half fuel prices revert toward pre-conflict levels. Separately, Citigroup added both DAL and SKYW to upside 30-day catalyst watch as believes higher fuel prices are priced into the airline stocks with the least amount of fuel exposure.
- In Aerospace & Defense: GE and PLTR expand partnership to transform military Aircraft readiness with Ai; PLTR announces strategic partnership with ONDS and World View for Ai-enabled ISR; JOBY announced that its first FAA-conforming Aircraft (N547JX) has successfully begun flight testing at its facility in Marina, California; FLY said its Alpha Flight 7 mission successfully reached orbit and delivered a Lockheed Martin demonstrator payload. The flight also validated key Alpha Block II upgrades, including a new in-house avionics suite, ahead of the full Block II rollout planned for Flight 8.
Materials, Metals & Mining
- In Chemicals: DOW and LYB both upgraded to Buy at Citigroup in the latest Wall Street analysts to raise ratings in the sector saying with the Iran conflict and closure of the Strait of Hormuz impacting global energy prices and capacity and shipments from the Middle East. With pressure on both supply and the cost curve, Citi believes Dow and LYB are poised to capture attractive export Dynamics and see greater margin expansion across a number of chains, particularly olefins & polyolefins given the Natural gas feedstock advantage.
- Fertilizer/Potash chemical names CF, NTR, MOS, IPI extend gains early (adding to yesterday) as US/Israel strikes on Iran have potential to bolster Nitrogen pricing for at least 1H26, providing further upside for North American producers, given the strain on LNG in the EU. Many fertilizers are shipped through Strait of Hormuz, including a third of the world’s urea exports, Yardeni Research says. Price of urea, major component in some fertilizers, has soared by $120 per ton to $591.75 per ton before start of the war, per Trading Economics. Also, NTR was upgraded to Buy from Hold at Jefferies and raised its tgt to $96 from $74 saying that with the Strait of Hormuz closed and Middle East producers halting production, global fertilizer markets have tightened with prices rising sharply. The conflict has forced domestic spot prices higher as the spring planting season begins.
Internet, Media & Telecom
- Optical & AI networking/photonics names face cautious mentions in Hunterbrook/Citrini Research as highlights negative views on AAOI, ALAB, CRDO, LITE and COHR. Citrini research takes cautious view after massive rally while Hunterbrook Capital disclosed a long position in HIMX as report contrasts Himax positioning against several optical connectivity and AI networking peers. Analysis notes AAOI as overvalued/a possible short, says COHR, LITE crowded trades and both ALAB, CRDO losing momentum vs Optics. https://hntrbrk.com/himax/
- Internet Services: MELI downgraded to Neutral at JP Morgan saying competition does not seem to be easing, with Shopee reiterating its willingness to continue sacrificing margins in Brazil; and they no longer see consensus EBIT stabilization — MELI is openly comfortable with a higher level of investments in the near future, making US revise down its profitability expectations. Piper is assuming coverage of Web Builders with OW rating on SHOP ($165 PT) as its top pick in the space, Neutral on WIX ($98 PT) is interesting given the recent Base44 ARR acceleration, but Piper thinks this was largely driven by YouTube ads and lastly is Neutral rated on GDDY ($93 PT), as Piper finds shares fairly valued for improving margins but declining core KPIs. In online dating, BMBL shares jumped on stronger Q4 results as revs beat ($224.2NM vs. $221.3M), while average revenue per paying user jumped 7.9% to $22.20, and said it was gearing up to introduce Bumble 2.0, a revamped version of the app.
- In Semiconductors: GFS announced 20M shares sold by subsidiary of Abu Dhabi sovereign wealth fund Mubadala Investment Company at $42.00 per share for deal size of $840M, a 4.7% discount to yesterday closing price. KLAC announced a share buyback program worth $7 billion, in addition to its existing share repurchase authorization and raises dividend by 21%.
Hardware & Software movers:
- CRM bond offering came at a much higher yield than comparable rated bonds for its massive debt sale on Wed as investors demanded more compensation to accept software-related risks – Financial Times.
- DSP reported Q425: strong results, with ex-TAC revenue and adjusted EBITDA exceeding consensus estimates by ~2% and ~7%, respectively as sustained momentum drove upside Q126 guidance and reaffirmed expectations for accelerating Y/Y ex-TAC revenue growth throughout FY26.
- MSFT is adding a dedicated health assistant to its Copilot chatbot, joining the ranks of technology companies betting that customers will turn to artificial intelligence tools for medical care – Bloomberg.
- NTSK shares fell after posting Q4 results that topped consensus for EPS and revs, but BMO and Keybanc both noted the ARR decelerated 3 points, and the beat was smaller than last quarter and overall, not as strong as its inaugural quarter post IPO; FY27 revs guided about 1 point above, though EBIT and FCF guided slightly below.
- PATH Q4 results show double-digit revenues and operating income growth, and FY GAAP profitability as well as net-new ARR display two straight quarters of growth; Q4 net-new ARR is below the 2022-2024 seasonal results and Q4 revenue beat magnitude and the FY27 outlook implies a slowing business.
- TEAM announced plans to cut around 10% of its workforce as part of a larger restructuring effort to Self-fund investments in Ai and enterprise sales, realign teams, and boost operational efficiency.