US Stock Tumble at Week’s End
The S&P 500 lost 1.4%,the Nasdaq tumbled 1.6%, and the Dow fell 1% on Friday as geopolitical volatility and disappointing labor data triggered a broad reassessment of the American economic trajectory. This coordinated decline reflects deep investor anxiety over the persistent rise in WTI crude oil prices and the unexpected loss of 92K non-farm payroll jobs in February. President Trump’s demand for unconditional Iranian surrender and warnings from regional energy ministers regarding production force majeure have combined to push energy costs to levels that threaten global manufacturing capacity. The resulting jump in unemployment to 4.4% reinforces fears of a stagflationary environment where rising input costs collide with cooling consumer demand. Investors moved quickly to reduce risk, leading to Blackrock (-7.2%) capping withdrawals for the first time from one of its private credit funds, as concerns regarding private credit exposure and broader economic stagnation took hold.
S&P 500 — US Large Cap Index
FTSE 100 — UK Blue Chips
Euro Stoxx 50 — Eurozone Leaders
DAX 40 — German Equities
CAC 40 — French Market Index
Nikkei 225 — Japan Benchmark
Hang Seng — Hong Kong Index
Shanghai Composite — China Mainland
ASX 200 — Australian Market
TSX Composite — Canada Index
Nifty 50 — India Large Cap
STI Index — Singapore Market
KOSPI — South Korea Index
Bovespa — Brazil Equities
JSE Top 40 — South Africa Index
IPC Index — Mexico Market





