Early Look
Friday, March 6, 2026
Futures | Up/Down | % | Last |
Dow | -134.00 | 0.28% | 47,849 |
S&P 500 | -25.25 | 0.37% | 6,809 |
Nasdaq | -124.50 | 0.50% | 24,925 |
U.S. stock futures are looking lower after resuming their decline Thursday following a one-day respite, as concerns over the Iran war flared up again with U.S. crude topping $80 per barrel, raising inflation and recessionary fears. Oil prices are on track for their biggest weekly advance since 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine. The retail price of gasoline rose to $3.32 gallon, according to the American Automobile Association. Futures have also rallied 27% this week and are on track for the biggest weekly advance since March 2022. Brent crude has rallied 20% this week, with futures on Friday climbing as much as 2.6% to more than $87 a barrel. Sending prices higher this morning, Qatar Energy Minister Saad al-Kaabi told the Financial Times in an interview published on Friday that they expect all Gulf energy producers to shut down exports within weeks if the Iran conflict continues and drives oil to $150 a barrel. Qatar halted its production of liquefied natural gas on Monday (the country's LNG production is equivalent to about 20% of global supply). Oil prices jumped, with West Texas Intermediate crude futures rising +4.5% at $84.65 after settled up more than 8% at $81.01 a barrel Thursday. In Asian markets, The Nikkei Index gained 342 points to 55,620, the Shanghai Index rose 15 points to 4,124, and the Hang Seng Index jumped 435 points to 25,757. In Europe, the German DAX is down -33 points to 23,781, while the FTSE 100 is down -5 points to 10,408. Next catalyst, the February jobs report due later (8:30 am et) which will focus attention on the other side of the Federal Reserve's dual mandate, the labor market. Economists expect the nonfarm-payrolls reading to show the US added 55,000 jobs. Shares of MRVL, GWRE, IOT are moving higher in the tech space following earnings results last night.
Market Closing Prices Yesterday
Economic Calendar for Today
Earnings Calendar:
Other Key Events:
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
Nymex | 3.60 | 84.63 |
Brent | 2.30 | 87.71 |
Gold | 18.00 | 5,096.70 |
EUR/USD | -0.0032 | 1.1577 |
JPY/USD | 0.30 | 157.88 |
10-Year Note | +0.03 | 4.17% |
World News
Sector News Breakdown
Consumer
Energy, Industrials and Materials
Healthcare
Technology, Media & Telecom
Mid-Morning Look
Friday, March 06, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | -666.11 | 1.39% | 47,268 |
S&P 500 | -83.58 | 1.22% | 6,747 |
Nasdaq | -227.43 | 1.00% | 22,519 |
Russell 2000 | -57.39 | 2.22% | 2,528 |
A double dose of negative headlines pressuring U.S. markets early as a further surge in oil prices (WTI crude jumps another 9% to move about $89 per barrel) raises inflation and recession fears, weighing on several sectors impacted by surging energy costs (travel etc.), while monthly jobs data showed the U.S. lost -92,000 jobs in February (the fewest jobs outside of a recession since 2003), far short of January's gain of 126,000 jobs and worse than the gain of +50,000 jobs that economists expected. The unemployment ticked slightly higher to 4.4% from 4.3%. Expectations for a cut of at least 25 basis points from the Fed at its June meeting increased after the jobs report, but that sent Treasury yields lower for the first time in 5 days and the dollar slipped, but only barely. The jobs report also raises fears that the impact on AI may already be taking hold for corporate America. The CBOE volatility index (VIX) touches over four month high, at 28.57, rising more than 17%. Bitcoin -3.7% at $68,5000 and Ethereum -4.5% breaking back below $2,000 as risk assets broadly lower on surging oil and the Nonfarm Payroll job losses. A rough start as the macro situation appears concerning into the weekend as the conflict between Iran and the U.S. (and other Middle East countries), is impacting supplies as
West Texas Intermediate futures broke above $89 per barrel. International Brent crude traded above $91 per barrel as investors weighed the impact of the U.S.-Iran war on global energy supply. Oil prices hit their highs of the day after President Donald Trump said in a Truth Social post that there won’t be a deal to end the U.S.-Iran war without an “unconditional surrender” from the Middle Eastern country. Prices jumped this morning after Qatar’s energy minister told The Financial Times that Gulf energy producers may need to call force majeure in the coming days, shutting down production in a move that could send oil to $150 a barrel. The conflict in the Middle East could “bring down the economies of the world,” he warned.
Economic Data
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | 7.32 | 88.32 |
Brent | 5.37 | 90.78 |
Gold | 84.20 | 5,163.40 |
EUR/USD | -0.002 | 1.1584 |
JPY/USD | 0.12 | 157.66 |
10-Year Note | 0.017 | 4.163% |
Sector Movers Today
Stock GAINERS
Stock LAGGARDS
Closing Recap
Friday, March 06, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | -453.19 | 0.95% | 47,501 |
S&P 500 | -90.72 | 1.33% | 6,739 |
Nasdaq | -361.31 | 1.59% | 22,387 |
Russell 2000 | -60.27 | 2.33% | 2,525 |
U.S. stocks end the day and week lower as a surprising jobs report and a spike in oil prices to highest levels in over 2 1/2 years was too much for investors to overcome heading into the weekend where the U.S./Iran conflict intensified on Friday and further disrupted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, limiting oil and other commodity supplies. Inflation fears and recession fears have grown the last few days given the massive sure in energy prices as U.S. WTI crude futures climb over 12% today alone closing around $91 per barrel, the highest level since October 2023 on Mideast conflict. Lots of names were active this week on the surge in energy costs hitting discretionary names, airlines, truckers, leisure, restaurants, as consumer spending will likely be impacted. At the same time, energy stocks, chemicals, shippers, were among leaders most of the week. The U.S. said they will provide reinsurance for losses up to $20 billion in the Gulf region, to help provide confidence for oil and gas shippers during the war on Iran. Only Consumer Staples and Energy finished the day higher while Materials, Financials, Technology and Consumer Discretionary were the biggest losers. Technology stocks tumbled in the last 45 minutes of trading after the whole AI Infrastructure/Data Center complex fell sharply after Bloomberg reported that ORCL and OpenAI end plans to expand Texas data center site, while META is in discussion with developer Crusoe to lease the expanded site (shares of CRWV, BE, NVDA, IREN, RIOT, NBIS all tumbled sharply). Note CNBC later refuted to Bloomberg story, but stocks remains pressured. The VIX went out at the highs into the weekend, +24.8% to 29.64 - highest since 4-23-25.
The other big story today was the jobs data as the U.S. lost -92,000 jobs in February (the fewest jobs outside of a recession since 2003), far short of January's gain of 126,000 jobs and worse than the gain of +50,000 jobs that economists expected. The unemployment ticked slightly higher to 4.4% from 4.3%. Expectations for a cut of at least 25 basis points from the Fed at its June meeting increased after the jobs report, but that sent Treasury yields lower for the first time in 5 days and the dollar slipped. Recall the Fed trimmed its federal funds target rate range by three quarters of a percentage point last year to between 3.5% and 3.75% to help bolster a flagging jobs market while still keeping enough restraint on to lower inflation that has stood well above the Fed’s 2% target.
For the week, the S&P 500 fell 2.02%, the Nasdaq declined 1.24%, and the Dow fell 3.01%. For the Dow industrials, register biggest weekly percentage decline since early April 2025, the S&P 500 records biggest weekly percentage drop since mid-October and the Russell 2000 records biggest weekly percentage drop since early August.
Economic Data
Commodities
Currencies & Treasuries
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | 9.89 | 90.90 |
Brent | 7.28 | 92.69 |
Gold | 80.00 | 5,158.70 |
EUR/USD | -0.00 | 1.1602 |
JPY/USD | 0.16 | 157.73 |
10-Year Note | -0.014 | 4.131% |
Sector News Breakdown
Retail, Consumer Staples & Restaurants:
Energy
Banks, Brokers, Asset Managers:
Insurance & Services:
Biotech & Pharma:
Transports
Materials, Metals & Mining
Technology
Not offered or endorsed by Regal Securities
Street Recommendations
Friday, March 6, 2026
B. RILEY
BARCLAYS
BENCHMARK
BMO CAPITAL
BOFA
BTIG
CANTOR FITZGERALD
CITI
DEUTSCHE BANK
GOLDMAN SACHS
JPMORGAN
KEYBANC
MORGAN STANLEY
NEEDHAM
NORTHCOAST
OPPENHEIMER
PIPER SANDLER
ROSENBLATT
STEPHENS
STIFEL
UBS
WEDBUSH
WELLS FARGO
Rating abbreviations…
***OP = Outperform
***SP = Sector Perform
***UP = Underperform
***OW = Overweight
***EW = Equal-weight
***UW = Underweight
***Report powered by thefly.com***
What’s on Tap Weekly Calendar
Monday March 9th
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Tuesday March 10th
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Wednesday March 11th
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Thursday March 12th
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Friday March 13th
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