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As of April 8, 2026, two stocks in the real estate sector could be flashing a real warning to investors who value momentum as a key criteria in their trading decisions.

Oil prices appear close to topping as Strait of Hormuz disruptions ease and global supply routes normalize. Iran's leverage over oil flows is peaking, incentivizing it to monetize before alternatives diminish its power.

The hedge fund industry consists of a wide variety of strategies that attract varying levels of investor interest over time. Factors such as capital market valuations, economic growth expectations, inflation rates, market liquidity, and risk tolerance significantly influence the demand for each strategy.

It appears that there is another 2-week extension to negotiate a cease-fire, but this is likely a fragile short-term truce. Inflationary pressures remain as long as the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, even partially.

US stocks are set for a sharply higher open on Wednesday, with futures pointing to strong gains after easing tensions in the Middle East lifted sentiment. Nasdaq futures led the move, up 3.5%, while the Dow Jones and S&P 500 were both called 2.8% higher.

U.S. President Donald Trump said "any and all" goods from countries found to be supplying Iran with weapons would be subject to sanctions. It comes after the U.S. and Iran agreed a two-week ceasefire.

As the Nasdaq and S&P look to keep the current rally alive, Cloudflare leads a slew of stocks to watch eyeing a buy zone.

Over the past few weeks, three of four major stock indexes - the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI), Nasdaq Composite (IXIC), and Russell 2000 Index (RUT) have entered correction territory, meaning a decline of 10% from the recent all-time high.

There is still a lot of negotiating ahead, with conflicting demands from Washington and Tehran, according to the analysts

U.S. And Iran Agree To Ceasefire

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.

Trump, Iran agree to reopen Strait of Hormuz, the Fed's looming leadership crisis, Intel will join Musk's effort to create a chip factory, and more news to start your day.

A look at the day ahead in U.S. and global markets from Alun John

Dow futures surged in early trading on Wednesday after Washington and Tehran agreed to a two-week ceasefire, easing fears of a broader regional conflict and triggering a cross-asset relief rally. Oil tumbled, Treasury yields eased and volatility gauges retreated as investors rotated back into risk assets.

India has adequate coal stocks available at its mines and power plants, with stocks sufficient to generate power for 24 days, a government official said on Wednesday.

Wall Street loves the cease-fire announcement but will it still embrace the deal once terms are ironed out?

Goldman Sachs senior trader says there are a lot of mechanics ready to push the market higher, but the Persian Gulf is not out of the woods.

Volumes were down 0.2% on month ahead of the jump in energy prices in March caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz.

European markets surge as U.S. President Donald Trump steps back from the brink, agreeing on a two-week ceasefire deal with Iran, subject to Iran unblocking the Strait of Hormuz. Construction & materials and financial services lead early gains in the European session, with oil & gas stocks tumbling.

Major global investment banks now expect China to keep official interest rates steady this year, scaling back earlier rate-cut calls, as the impact from the Middle East conflict appears limited, even as Beijing maintains a loose policy stance.