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Investors' hopes for a quick resolution to the Iran war are fading. U.S. stocks and bonds slid on Friday after the Pentagon sent three more warships and a new deployment of marines to the region, increasing fears of a prolonged conflict that extends the largest disruption to oil supplies in history.

Global central banks are striking a hawkish tone as persistent inflation fuels volatility across markets. Sam Vadas and Alex Coffey break down policy signals from the Fed, BOE, and ECB, rising bond yields, and how Middle East tensions are influencing rates.

All three major indexes were once again down for the week. Blame it on oil, gold, and the Fed.

The iShares MSCI Saudi Arabia ETF has shown resilience amid the Iran conflict, declining just over 1% versus UAE's 17% drop. KSA offers diversified sector exposure, fair valuation at ~15x earnings, and benefits from reinvestment of oil profits and strategic geographic advantages.

US stocks closed sharply lower on Friday, as escalating tensions in the Middle East and surging oil prices weighed on investor sentiment and raised concerns about inflation and interest rates. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell about 0.96% or 443 points to 45,577.47, while the S&P 500 dropped 1.51% to 6,506.48.

Comprehensive cross-platform coverage of the U.S. market close on Bloomberg Television, Bloomberg Radio, and YouTube with Romaine Bostick, Katie Greifeld, Carol Massar and Tim Stenovec. -------- More on Bloomberg Television and Markets Like this video?

Iran's missile strikes on Qatar's giant Ras Laffan liquefied natural gas (LNG) hub have handed U.S.-based natural gas names an abrupt tailwind, as traders scramble to reprice a market that suddenly looks much tighter for years, not months.

Markets seem particularly attuned to increasing oil prices, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq down 1.5% and 2% respectively

Jerome Powell's admission of uncertainty signals a shift from predictable monetary policy to a data-driven, less model-dependent investment environment. Fed's dot plot now projects higher inflation (2.7% in 2026) and slightly stronger growth, reducing confidence in imminent rate cuts and increasing market volatility.

Tom Lee, Fundstrat, joins 'Power Lunch' to discuss Lee's price target for the S&P, the market's potential to go higher and much more.

The U.S. hyperscalers—Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Oracle—dominate global private data center capital expenditures. These five companies collectively represent an estimated $602B in annual CapEx, driving the majority of hyperscale data center investment.

The Iran conflict and AI anxiety have weighed heavily on the market, but it's also opened up some compelling opportunities for patient investors. Dave Bartosiak explains how to position yourself for success when this spell is finally broken.

The world's top energy executives return to Houston next week as the escalating U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has become a nightmare for energy markets, as unprecedented attacks on infrastructure and shipping disruptions sent global oil prices soaring while governments scrambled to fight inflation and avoid recessions.

The current economic landscape is often defined by its loudest headlines: geopolitical strife, shifting central bank leadership, and the ghosts of sticky inflation. However, the challenge for disciplined investors lies in peering through this noise to discern the structural engines driving the U.S. economy.

The Federal Reserve held rates steady at 3.50%-3.75%, maintaining a cautious stance amid Middle East-driven uncertainty and elevated inflation. Chair Powell signaled he will remain on the Board of Governors until DOJ investigations conclude, effectively blocking presidential control of the Fed.

The Investment Committee debate the S&P's longest losing streak since March and how to navigate the volatility.

The Russell 2000 has fallen more than 10% off its recent high, becoming the first of the major U.S. benchmarks to fall into correction territory. A correction is defined as a decline of more than 10% and less than 20% from a recent high.

"Bloomberg Real Yield" highlights the market-moving news you need to know. Today's guests: Schwab Center for Financial Research Kathy Jones, Allspring Global Investment George Bory, BNP Paribas Head of Credit Strategy Meghan Robson, and CreditSights Head of US IG & Marco Strategy Zachary Griffiths.

I believe inflation will stay front and center through the first half of the year. Oil flows will take months to normalize once the transit through Hormuz resumes.

Rate traders are now pricing in a higher chance of a Fed rate hike this year than they are a rate cut.