General Market News
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent announced that President Trump's 15% global tariff will be implemented this week. He predicted that U.S. tariff rates will return to their pre-Supreme Court levels within five months, following the court's decision to strike down Trump's 'reciprocal' duties.
- The 15% global tariff will take effect sometime during the current week
- Bessent expects tariff rates to revert to their previous levels within five months after the Supreme Court invalidated Trump's broader 'reciprocal' tariff program
- The announcement comes as the administration adjusts its trade policy following the Supreme Court's legal setback on tariffs
Large institutional investors have been net sellers of single-family rental homes since 2022, well before President Trump's January executive order aimed at restricting their purchases. In markets like Atlanta, investors are now selling nearly two properties for every one they buy, with data showing they account for a disproportionate share of new listings relative to their ownership stake.
- In Dallas, investors own 9.2% of housing stock but represent 22.8% of new for-sale listings; FirstKey Homes is cutting prices an average of 10% off original list prices every 20 days
- Invitation Homes, a major publicly traded landlord, sold 1,356 wholly owned homes in 2025 while acquiring 2,410 properties, with almost all purchases being new construction from homebuilders rather than existing homes
- Investors are pivoting to the build-to-rent market for better risk-adjusted returns, as rents are not holding up relative to sale prices amid elevated home prices and borrowing costs since 2020
The European Central Bank is determined to avoid repeating its 2022 mistake of dismissing inflation as 'transitory' after missing the post-pandemic surge. With the Iran war pushing oil prices 20% higher and threatening further energy price shocks, ECB policymakers are maintaining a lower threshold for potential policy action, despite concerns that rate hikes could harm already-weak growth in the import-dependent eurozone.
- The ECB was among the last major central banks to raise rates in 2022, only hiking in July while calling inflation 'transitory,' then had to raise rates at record pace as inflation exceeded 10% - five times its 2% target
- Oil prices have already risen 20% this week due to the Iran conflict, and Qatar's suspension of LNG supplies will force European buyers to compete with Asian markets for energy
- Markets are pricing in a 20-30% chance of an ECB rate hike this year, though no action is expected at the March 19 meeting; policymakers face a dilemma as rate hikes take 12-18 months to impact prices while energy shocks could hurt growth
The OECD warns that inflation, driven by surging energy prices from Middle East conflict, poses the biggest risk to global bond markets facing a major stress test. Governments and companies are expected to borrow $29 trillion in 2025, up from $25 trillion in 2024, with refinancing risks reaching record levels. The organization also cautions that massive AI infrastructure borrowing could transform corporate bond markets and challenge their ability to absorb new supply.
- Refinancing risk hit a record $13.5 trillion, representing 80% of OECD country borrowing in 2025, with emerging markets particularly vulnerable as over one-third of their debt matures within three years
- Nine major AI hyperscalers (including Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft) need to fund $4.1 trillion in capital spending through 2030, potentially accounting for 15% of global corporate bond issuance if half is debt-financed
- Additional AI infrastructure investments of roughly $5 trillion by 2030 may strain the $17.2 trillion global corporate bond market's capacity, especially amid expanding sovereign borrowing and a shifting investor base toward more price-sensitive participants
Cryptocurrency exchange Kraken's banking unit has secured access to the Federal Reserve's core payment systems, according to the Wall Street Journal. This approval allows Kraken Financial to move money using the same infrastructure as traditional banks and credit unions, enabling faster and more efficient transaction processing for large clients and professional traders. The development signals the crypto sector's increasing integration into mainstream finance.
- Kraken Financial can now handle transactions on the same payment rails used by thousands of banks and credit unions
- The access is expected to improve transaction speed and efficiency for big clients and professional traders
- This move reflects growing institutional interest in digital assets and crypto's expanding foothold in traditional financial markets
Corporate treasuries are hesitant to adopt real-time payments despite consumer enthusiasm, with only 5% of larger SMBs having digitized their payment processes. The reluctance stems from unclear value propositions, integration challenges with legacy systems, and security concerns about irrevocable transactions. Banks and payment providers are working to demonstrate concrete use cases to accelerate corporate adoption.
- 32% of businesses cite high fees as the main reason for avoiding instant payments, viewing real-time rails as incremental rather than transformative compared to existing ACH and wire transfers
- Integration poses significant obstacles as real-time payments require new message formats and data fields that don't map easily to legacy batch-processing systems, forcing IT upgrades to compete with other priorities
- Fraud concerns are elevated because real-time payments are typically irrevocable, changing risk calculations for enterprises accustomed to recallable payment rails and making authorized push payment fraud harder to prevent
UAE stock exchanges reopened Wednesday after a two-day closure following Iranian missile and drone strikes on the Gulf nation, with major indexes experiencing sharp sell-offs. Dubai's benchmark index fell 4.9%, its worst day since May 2022, while Abu Dhabi's main index dropped over 3%. The strikes, which damaged Dubai's international airport and commercial areas, were launched in retaliation for an attack that killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
- Both exchanges temporarily adjusted lower price limit thresholds to -5%, with state-owned Emirates NBD down 5.2% and budget airline Air Arabia falling 5% amid thousands of flight cancellations
- Citi analysts warned the escalation could have 'a profound and potentially long-lasting impact' on the MENA region, with Dubai's Emaar and Abu Dhabi's Aldar real estate developers most at risk from increased equity risk premium
- The Gulf sell-off follows a global market downdraft, with Asian markets continuing losses while European stocks attempted to snap two days of declines
European markets are expected to open mixed on Wednesday as investors continue monitoring escalating conflict in the Middle East involving U.S., Israeli, and Iranian forces. Regional stocks had fallen sharply on Tuesday, with banking, insurance, travel, and utilities leading losses. The situation has prompted Western countries to organize citizen evacuations from the region.
- President Trump announced the U.S. would provide insurance to tankers in the Persian Gulf and deploy Navy escorts if necessary to maintain maritime traffic through the Strait of Hormuz
- Asian markets experienced severe volatility, with South Korea's Kospi plunging over 12% overnight before recovering some losses
- U.K. stocks are forecast to open 0.3% higher while German and French markets are expected flat and Italian stocks slightly lower
Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon expressed surprise at the 'benign' market reaction to the Middle East conflict, stating it may take a couple of weeks for investors to fully digest the implications. While oil prices have spiked on supply concerns and investors have moved to safe havens, Wall Street losses have been relatively mild with the S&P 500 down less than 1% this week.
- Solomon noted markets typically react in muted ways to geopolitical events unless they directly impact economic growth, though cumulative effects could trigger harsher reactions
- The S&P 500 has declined less than 1% this week despite the conflict, with early losses being pared by close of trading on both days
- Oil price spikes from the conflict are exacerbating inflation concerns, though Solomon cited strong U.S. macro tailwinds including easing monetary policy and regulatory relaxation
U.S. Treasury bond yields are rising due to inflation concerns triggered by escalating U.S.-Iran conflict and increasing oil prices. The 10-year Treasury yield has climbed to 4.06%, reversing last week's drop below 4%, as Iran's actions disrupt oil traffic through the Strait of Hormuz where about a fifth of global oil and liquefied natural gas travels.
- Oil prices have risen more than 10% but remain around $80 per barrel, well below 2022 levels of $120+; analysts warn a sustained move to $90-$100 range would significantly alter the macro outlook
- Market expectations for Federal Reserve policy remain largely unchanged, with investors still anticipating two rate cuts this year despite potential inflation pressures
- Rising Treasury yields directly impact borrowing costs across the economy, including mortgages and business loans, potentially tightening financial conditions for consumers and businesses
U.S. stocks rebounded from early sell-offs for a second consecutive day on Tuesday despite escalating conflict in the Middle East, as investors remain confident the war in Iran won't derail the resilient U.S. economy. Wall Street's calm reflects the view that only a complete, sustained closure of the Strait of Hormuz—currently deemed unlikely—would push oil prices high enough to threaten economic growth.
- The Strait of Hormuz, through which about 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas transits, temporarily slowed to near-standstill after Iran announced closures, but President Trump said the U.S. Navy would escort tankers if necessary
- Oxford Economics estimates a 'modest disruption' lasting two months would add only 0.3-0.4 percentage points to U.S. inflation, insufficient to derail markets or fundamentally change the economic outlook
- A complete blockade of the strait—assigned just 10% probability and 'diminishing over time'—would be required to push Brent crude to $130/barrel (from $80 recently), the level needed to significantly impact growth
U.S. stock markets experienced significant intraday volatility on Tuesday, initially plunging over 2% after Iran's Revolutionary Guard threatened to close the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway handling 20% of global oil trade. Markets rebounded sharply after President Trump announced the U.S. Navy would escort tankers through the strait if necessary, with major indexes recovering to losses under 1% by afternoon trading.
- Iran attacked energy infrastructure across Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and Oman with drones and missiles, pushing Brent crude to $84 and WTI approaching $80 per barrel
- Analyst Luke Lango outlines three scenarios: negotiated resolution (markets recover quickly), prolonged conflict (oil at $100-$140, rotation to defense/energy stocks), or state collapse (oil to $150-$200, gold to $6,000+, potential recession)
- Investment strategy recommended: hold high-conviction long-term positions if thesis remains intact, but consider exits on low-conviction speculative trades where momentum has broken and stop-losses have triggered
Must Read Ex-Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein sounds alarm on private credit — warning it ‘smells' like 2008
Former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein warned that the $1.8 trillion private credit market could trigger a 2008-style financial crisis, citing hidden leverage, lack of liquidity, and opaque assets. He expressed concern that these risky investments are increasingly being offered to retail investors through retirement accounts just as market risks are rising. Other industry leaders, including JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon, have echoed concerns about risky lending practices in the sector.
- Blankfein sees parallels to 2008, warning of possible 'hidden secret leverage' similar to the mortgage crisis, stating 'we're due for a kind of reckoning' as the market reaches late-cycle stages
- Recent warning signs include souring loans at firms like BlackRock and the insolvency of UK lender Market Financial Solutions amid fraud allegations and improperly pledged assets
- Private credit involves non-bank lenders making loans outside traditional regulatory oversight, with reduced transparency creating systemic risks as retail access expands and economic conditions potentially worsen
New York Federal Reserve President John Williams highlighted a widening economic gap between high-income and low-income households in a March 3, 2026 speech. While wealthy households drive GDP growth through robust spending fueled by stock market gains and rising home prices, lower-income households face increasing financial constraints, with mortgage delinquency rates rising most sharply in lower-income areas and regions with higher unemployment.
- Williams estimates tariffs have added 0.5 to 0.75 percentage points to the current 3% inflation rate, with costs borne primarily by U.S. businesses and consumers
- A New York Fed analysis shows mortgage delinquency rates are most pronounced among borrowers in lower-income zip codes and counties with rising unemployment
- 47% of product leaders at goods firms view tariffs as mostly or completely negative for business finances, with 59% saying tariff disruption prevents pursuit of long-term cost-saving initiatives
The U.S. Treasury Department and bank regulators are planning a comprehensive review of bank liquidity rules, arguing current requirements are ineffective and restrict lending. Officials discussed changes that would allow banks to reduce funds set aside by using the Federal Reserve's discount window, a move that could ease regulatory burdens while maintaining stability safeguards.
- Treasury Under Secretary Jonathan McKernan proposed giving banks liquidity credit for prepositioning collateral at the Fed's discount window, potentially reducing stigma around using this emergency funding tool
- The 2023 Silicon Valley Bank collapse, which saw massive deposit outflows within days, has focused regulators' attention on reforming liquidity requirements
- Fed Vice Chair Michelle Bowman called for 'fundamental reform' of the discount window, citing inconsistent application across the 12 Federal Reserve banks