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Financial markets are now pricing in months of higher gasoline prices, and panic is spreading.

UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves sits down with Bloomberg's Stephanie Flanders after delivering her budget outlook in the government's Spring Statement. They talk about the economy, the war in Iran and finalizing a trade deal with the US.

The NASDAQ fell three percent in February, the tech-heavy index's worst monthly performance since March 2025. The private credit markets and a war in Iran are two new worries for investors that emerged in February.

Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis President Neel Kashkari examines the potential inflation impact on the United States from the war with Iran and what it could mean for monetary policy. He speaks on the sidelines of Bloomberg Invest.

Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said that he expects one rate cut later this year, but needs to examine further data to assess if that stance is appropriate due to recent geopolitical events.

A top Federal Reserve official said he sees an increasing divide between low-income and high-income households.

The U.S. Treasury Department and bank regulators are eyeing a comprehensive review of bank liquidity rules, arguing existing rules are ineffective and impede lending.

Investors' sky-high hopes for technology companies are being met these days by a far more earthbound reality.

After a subdued day of market action on Monday as investors digested the rising conflict in the Middle East, Tuesday brought a different tone.

Rising oil prices driven by the US-Iran war threaten to trigger a secondary inflation wave, reminiscent of the 1978 scenario. Core CPI is at a critical inflection point, with energy price shocks likely to push inflation higher in the coming months.

"This will be a shakeout. I don't think it is going to be short term," Marc Rowan, CEO and co-founder of Apollo Global Management, says during a discussion with Bloomberg News Editor-in-Chief John Micklethwait at Bloomberg Invest.
Reclaiming technical support in the major indices will be crucial for a market rebound, says @CharlesSchwab's Nathan Peterson. That will be difficult is the Iran-U.S. conflict is not short-lived.

America's three major stock markets, the Dow, Nasdaq, and S&P, are all down sharply in morning trading as of this writing. The wave of red across investors' monitors is primarily due to one major factor: uncertainty around how far the Iran conflict will travel and how long it will last.

Soros Fund Management Chief Investment Officer Dawn Fitzpatrick said investors are in for a “painful” 18 to 24 months as markets grapple with geopolitical risks and the threat of AI disruption. She speaks to Lisa Abramowicz at Bloomberg Invest.

Wall Street's fear gauge, or VIX, is flashing red as the S&P 500, tracked by the SPDR S&P 500 ETF (NYSE: SPY), plunges and volatility explodes higher on Tuesday.

Iran's Revolutionary Guards announced late on Monday that they were closing the Strait of Hormuz and threatened to fire at any vessel trying to pass through the shipping route. The Strait is a strategically critical waterway that is used by Middle Eastern countries to ship oil on board tankers.

As Iran escalates attacks on its Gulf neighbors, Ret. Gen. Wesley Clark said that there will be no clear timeline on when the conflict between the U.S. and Iran could cool down.

Investors rushed to buy U.S. stocks on Monday after the U.S. and Israeli bombardment of Iran helped inspire a global selloff. That may have been short-sighted.

The private-equity firm plans to combine it with Auctane, its shipping and fulfillment portfolio company.

Oil prices surged this week after the breakout of the Iran conflict, which some analysts have said could precede broader inflation. The U.S. West Texas Intermediate benchmark rose 7% Monday while Brent crude oil futures rose as much as 8%, the latter reaching its highest mark in more than a year.