There is something almost eerie about watching Wall Street attempt to function normally right now. Traders are staring at screens that flash red more than green, oil is creeping past $100 a barrel, and somewhere in the background, a war in the Middle East — now entering its sixth week — is quietly rewriting the rules of everything investors thought they understood about 2026.
The week ahead on Wall Street carries a familiar rhythm on paper: retail sales numbers, manufacturing data, a few corporate earnings. But beneath that surface, there is a palpable tension. Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report — which will land when U.S. stock markets are closed for the Good Friday holiday — is being treated less like a routine economic data point and more like a verdict.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Report Name | U.S. March Employment Situation (Nonfarm Payrolls) |
| Releasing Agency | U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) |
| Release Date | Friday, April 3, 2026 (markets closed — Good Friday) |
| Expected Job Additions | ~48,000–60,000 (Reuters/FactSet estimates) |
| Expected Unemployment Rate | 4.4%–4.5% |
| Prior Month (February) | -92,000 jobs (surprise decline) |
| S&P 500 YTD Performance | Down more than 5% in 2026 |
| Nasdaq Status | In correction (down 10%+ from October high) |
| WTI Crude Oil (Current) | ~$102/barrel (above $100 for first time since 2022) |
| Brent Crude | ~$112/barrel |
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | ~4.4% (up from ~4.0% pre-war) |
| Key Conflict | U.S.-Israeli military strikes on Iran (began February 28, 2026) |
| Reference Links | U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Employment Data |
| Federal Reserve — Monetary Policy Updates |
The conflict that began on February 28, when U.S. and Israeli forces launched strikes against Iran, has sent shockwaves through global markets in ways that are still difficult to fully map. The Strait of Hormuz closure choked off a significant chunk of global oil supply almost immediately. West Texas Intermediate crude settled above $102 a barrel on Monday — the first time it has crossed that threshold since 2022 — while Brent crude closed above $112.
Andy Lipow, CEO of Lipow Oil Associates, put it plainly: “We really do have a physical oil disruption where oil is being left in the ground, and every day this goes by, the disruption gets worse.” Macquarie Group has gone further, suggesting Brent could reach $200 if the conflict stretches into summer. That kind of forecast would have seemed extreme even a month ago.
American consumers are already feeling the pinch. Gas prices have surged past $4 a gallon nationally, transportation costs for businesses have jumped, and that familiar creeping anxiety about inflation — which markets spent most of last year trying to put behind them — is back. Treasury yields have climbed in response, with the benchmark 10-year hitting 4.4 percent, up from roughly 4 percent before the war started. As yields rise, the pressure on equity valuations builds quietly but persistently.
The S&P 500 is on pace for its fifth consecutive weekly decline, down nearly 6 percent since the strikes began and more than 5 percent for the year. The Nasdaq, meanwhile, has confirmed what many suspected: it is in correction territory, off more than 10 percent from its October all-time high. Semiconductor stocks, including Micron and SanDisk, have led the sell-off in tech, weighed down by lingering concerns about AI memory demand.
It’s hard not to notice how quickly the narrative shifted — just months ago, artificial intelligence was the story investors couldn’t stop celebrating. Now it’s a source of disruption anxiety.
The March jobs report sits at the center of all this. Consensus estimates put job additions somewhere between 48,000 and 60,000 for the month, with unemployment holding around 4.4 to 4.5 percent. That would represent a recovery from February’s jarring 92,000 decline — itself partly driven by strike activity at Starbucks and Kaiser Permanente — but would still land well below January’s 126,000 figure.
James Ragan at D.A. Davidson said it simply: “Any positive number would probably be good for the market.” That is a low bar, and the fact that it feels meaningful tells you something about where investor confidence is right now.
There is a complication worth sitting with, though. The March survey data was collected mid-month, which means it likely captured the first weeks of the war but not its full economic weight. Economists largely expect that businesses paused hiring plans rather than cutting jobs outright — at least initially. That calculus could shift dramatically if the conflict extends further. It’s still unclear whether the labor market data will tell a reassuring story or simply a delayed one.
The Federal Reserve, watching all of this, is in an uncomfortable position. It cut rates last year in response to softening employment. But with oil-driven inflation already running above its target, any further rate cuts look nearly impossible. Markets, per LSEG data, are now pricing in no cuts for 2026 — and a modest probability of an actual hike. That is a remarkable reversal from where expectations stood just a few months ago.
Jim Baird of Plante Moran Financial Advisors noted that markets would remain “headline driven” in the near term. Any signal of de-escalation with Iran, he said, could meaningfully lift sentiment. Any signal of a prolonged war would do the opposite. There’s a sense that investors are not really trading on economic fundamentals right now — they are watching news feeds, reading geopolitical signals, and hoping Friday’s number provides some kind of anchor.
Whether a jobs report can anchor anything in this environment remains genuinely uncertain. What is clear is that Wall Street enters this week bracing — not quite for the worst, but not at all sure it has seen the worst either.

