Market & World News Brief

Concise updates on markets, economy, and space for 30 March – 3 April 2026.
Today’s key points

Geopolitics & Market Mood

The ongoing war involving Iran continues to unsettle global markets and politics. Tensions across the Middle East — including U.S.-Iran hostilities and actions by regional actors — are contributing to a “risk-off” stance in global trading.

This shift is supporting the U.S. dollar while weighing on equities worldwide, as investors reassess risk amid war-related uncertainty.

Source: Myfxbook analysis

Equities Under Pressure

Global stock markets are experiencing heavy selling. In the United States, major indices entered or moved deeper into correction territory last week, with the Nasdaq now more than 10% below its recent record.

The downturn has extended into Asia and Europe, where selling has followed the U.S. slide. Analysts highlight that investors are bracing for more volatility as they monitor the war and upcoming economic data.

Source: AP News

U.S. Economic Focus: Jobs & Fed Signals

For the week of 30 March – 3 April 2026, markets are concentrating on U.S. labor data and Federal Reserve commentary. Friday’s March employment report, along with JOLTS and ADP figures, will be watched to judge whether the labor market is cooling further.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to speak today. Futures markets have largely priced out additional 2026 interest-rate cuts, reflecting persistent inflation and uncertainty linked to the war.

Source: Kiplinger

Energy, Commodities & Foreign Markets

Oil prices are moving higher on fears that the conflict could disrupt energy supplies. Gold, which had recently benefited from safe‑haven demand, fell about 2% in Asian trading today.

Equity markets in India and other parts of Asia opened sharply lower, following the earlier sell‑off in U.S. stocks.

Source: AP News

Space & Science: Transporter‑16 Launch

SpaceX’s Transporter‑16 rideshare mission is scheduled to launch today, 30 March, carrying a range of NASA science and engineering payloads along with numerous small satellites.

The mission continues NASA’s use of commercial rideshare launches to place smaller experiments into orbit.

Source: Orbital Today