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Jobless claims coming in slightly under Wall Street estimates add to Kevin Hincks's perspective that markets will remain resilient despite trading at all-time highs. However, have one eye on headlines, as developments between the U.S. and Iran can rattle forward price action.

Global equity markets have climbed back to record highs after a volatile six-week period dominated by geopolitical tensions. Investor sentiment has improved on signs of easing conflict risks and renewed focus on economic fundamentals.

New jobless claims were down from a week ago, a sign that layoffs have remained limited even in a labor market that has cooled.

New York Fed President John Williams expressed concern Thursday about the Iran war's impact on the economy, saying it already has shown signs of hiking prices and slowing growth. "This has begun to play out already," the policymaker said in a speech.

The S&P 500 has surged ~12% in two weeks, reaching new all-time highs, but technicals now suggest overbought conditions and potential for a pullback or consolidation. Geopolitical developments, particularly the U.S. blockade strategy with Iran, have fueled optimism, yet uncertainties remain around conflict resolution and its impact on oil and inflation.

How has the expected future changed for the quarterly dividends of the S&P 500 (SPX) in the month since our previous snapshot? As of 15 April 2026, the outlook for the S&P 500's quarterly dividends through the end of 2026 and the first quarter of 2027 has improved considerably over the past month.

During times of turbulence and uncertainty in the markets, many investors turn to dividend-yielding stocks. These are often companies that have high free cash flows and reward shareholders with a high dividend payout.

Live Nation fallout, the biggest IPO of 2026, companies using AI as an excuse for layoffs, and more news to start your day.

The S&P 500 hit 7,000 on April 15th, validating a greedy call made at what looked like peak fear in late March. Technically, the March correction did something useful: it reset the index back toward the middle of its long-term channel rather than the top.

Nomura strategist Charlie McElligott says there's no reason to abandon this market chase higher, but there may soon be.

What matters in U.S. and global markets today

Plus, no cease-fire between Trump and the Fed.

The most oversold stocks in the consumer discretionary sector presents an opportunity to buy into undervalued companies.

Major U.S. banks delivered a split picture this week, as Middle East-linked market volatility lifted trading in the first quarter but clouded dealmaking prospects.

Wall Street heads into Thursday's open with momentum still intact, but the next leg of the rally looks harder to earn. Investors have spent the past week looking through geopolitical risk and focusing instead on the possibility that the worst of the conflict may be over.

Fundstrat found that while retail investors sold aggressively as the market bottomed at the end of March, hedge funds were buying the dip

Anthony Scaramucci thinks a US recession is already here. Scaramucci criticized Trump's policies, linking them to economic decline and inflation.

Banks are investing excess capital in expanding their Wall Street businesses.

The law doesn't clearly say what happens when the chair's term expires without a confirmed successor. The White House and the Fed have very different answers.

The S&P 500 and Nasdaq post new record highs as investors signal hopes for an end to the ran conflict. The positive sentiment has also affected Asian equities with the Nikkei leading gains.