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Surging fuel costs tied to the Middle East war are putting mounting pressure on lower-income households while those better off financially have navigated the situation more easily, a report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York said.

The Dow is trading above the 49,683.30 threshold it will need to hold through the close to officially exit its correction

Kevin Green breaks down how Iran headlines are shaping early market action, with buyers stepping in and markets recovering most of the recent lows. He discusses employment data, earnings season takeaways, and how the bar was set very low going in.

Solid data this week suggest the labor market is picking up. The real test will come with the April jobs report on Friday.

The international value investor and Moerus co-founder on the importance of conviction, survivability, risk aversion, industry structure, and opportunities for value investors in today's market.

Carrier, Trane, Vertiv, Eaton, and other companies are seeing a surge in demand as AI data centers require more advanced cooling technology.

US Ambassador to the EU Andrew Puzder says President Donald Trump could go ahead with a 25% tariff on European cars and trucks "relatively soon" if there is no progress on the bloc's ratification of a a trade deal that the two sides initially reached last July. Puzder talks with Bloomberg's Oliver Crook in Brussels.

Wayne Kaufman says today's market feels like the 1990s, with stocks opening higher on news of possible Iran framework. He points to massive growth trends, shortages in areas like data centers, and says analysts are still behind the curve.

Markets are displaying a dangerous degree of complacency, Barclays argues. To justify and build on recent equity market ebullience, risk appetite needs a resolution in the Middle East.

A busy docket of Annual General Meetings follows what has been a very strong Q1 earnings season. Global companies across sectors meet with stockholders to discuss strategy, outline new targets, and address concerns.

U.S. crude stocks, gasoline and distillate inventories fell last week, the Energy Information Administration said on Wednesday.

The extra return that investors receive for the additional risk of owning stocks over bonds has been fading, and that is making some on Wall Street nervous that investors might be too complacent about the stock market's recent rally.

The online process to reclaim U.S. tariff payments deemed illegal by the Supreme Court is running "smoother" than anticipated, a U.S. customs expert at freight forwarder Kuehne und Nagel said.

Kevin Warsh, incoming Fed Chair, is considering adopting the Dallas Fed's Trimmed Mean PCE as the primary inflation measure. Trimmed Mean PCE currently shows a 2.4% y/y rate, well below Core PCE's 3.2% and closer to the Fed's 2% target.

The president's plan to raise tariffs on EU cars shows how little protection trade deals offer.

The capital spending ambitions tied to the AI buildout are so large that the micro is macro. Overall revenues could justify the spend – yet it's unclear how much will accrue to the tech companies driving the buildout.

US Indices are reacting to dropping rates, but look overdone to say the least.

Wall Street's main indexes opened higher on Wednesday, extending a strong run fueled by optimism over a potential US-Iran peace agreement and continued enthusiasm around artificial intelligence-driven growth. Stock indices advanced after reports suggested Washington and Tehran were nearing a deal to end the conflict.

Effects of the Middle East conflict continue to reverberate through the global economy, but for the strongest performers among US equity factors, the war has been little more than an afterthought. Momentum and high‑beta have rallied sharply since the war started and are outperforming the broad market by a wide margin, based on a set of ETFs through May 5's close.

Futures are pointing higher as investors react to reports that the U.S. and Iran may be nearing a peace agreement. Axios reported the two sides are close to a memorandum of understanding, while President Trump's social media posts have tempered some of the early optimism.