News Brief
- Iran–U.S.–Israel tensions and a rejected ceasefire plan keep oil markets on edge, with G7 warning of “extreme” volatility.
- Global equities face pressure from higher oil prices and inflation worries; gold rises while the U.S. dollar softens.
- Investors focus on a heavy U.S. data calendar including ADP jobs, services PMI, durable goods, and oil inventories.
- U.S. futures and Indian equities trade nervously, with Sensex and Nifty down on weaker global risk sentiment.
- NASA’s Artemis II crew sets a new distance record for humans during a far‑side lunar flyby.
Middle East Tensions and Oil
Markets and policymakers remain focused on the Iran–U.S.–Israel confrontation. Iran has rejected a proposed 45‑day ceasefire and instead put forward its own 10‑point plan. G7 finance ministers have warned that the conflict and disruptions near the Strait of Hormuz could trigger “extreme” market volatility and sharp swings in oil prices.
Global Markets and Commodities
Asian and European equities are under pressure as higher oil prices, inflation concerns, and supply disruptions weigh on sentiment. Gold prices are rising, while the U.S. dollar has softened on expectations that a possible Middle East ceasefire and lower oil prices could ease future inflation and influence interest‑rate paths.
Key Economic Data Today
Investors are watching a busy U.S. data slate including ADP employment figures, services PMI, durable goods orders, and weekly oil‑inventory reports. These releases are viewed as important for assessing growth and inflation prospects against the backdrop of the Iran crisis and volatile energy prices.
U.S. and Indian Stock Markets
U.S. equity futures and Asian markets are trading nervously. Indian benchmarks opened sharply lower, with the Sensex down by several hundred points and the Nifty also weaker as global risk appetite fades. Sector‑specific moves are expected in banking, autos, pharma, renewables, and infrastructure, with multiple brokerages issuing updated “stocks to watch” and buy lists for 7 April.
NASA’s Artemis II Milestone
NASA confirms that on 6 April 2026 the crewed Artemis II mission passed around the far side of the Moon and set a new record for the farthest humans have been from Earth, at roughly 252,757 miles (406,773 km). An updated NASA release also refined Orion’s closest‑approach altitude on the lunar flyby to about 4,067 miles.