Morning Brief: 3 big questions, 2 answers, and rate cut hopes remain alive

👋 Good morning! The rate-holding Fed may have kept its projection to cut rates this year, but the reaction to the central bank's meeting and hot inflation data pushed markets into the red, breaking a two-day winning streak for stocks.

On Wednesday, the S&P 500 (^GSPC) closed 1.4% down, the Dow (^DJI) 1.6%, and the Nasdaq (^IXIC) 1.5%. Oil, meanwhile, jumped as the Iran conflict further spooked energy markets, with Brent (BZ=F) touching $110 per barrel.

Yahoo Finance Morning Brief

On the agenda this morning:

✂️ Rate cut hopes remain as the Fed's expectations change

🏦 Powell pours cold water on stagflation concerns

🏷️ Inflation worries spike

🛢️ Hormuz disarray

🙋 Three big questions, two answers

✈️ Airlines say consumers are spending through it

📆 What we're watching Thursday: Corporate results from FedEx (FDX), Carnival Corporation (CCL), and Darden Restaurants (DRI) are on our watchlist today — as are any more Fed musings as markets digest Powell's comments.

And, of course, Iran.


📰 What's on our radar

🚢 President Trump waives the Jones Act. The pause on the requirement that only US ships can travel between domestic ports is a bid to fight rising energy prices. Economists have their doubts.

⚡️ Tesla's new competitor? The new BMW i3 and its 440-mile range.

🔺 Micron beats on quarterly results. And posts better-than-expected Q3 guidance as the AI trade continues to boost memory demand.

🍪 Nvidia just changed its strategic approach to AI. The big takeaway from its GTC event? It's going all in on inferencing and agents.

🏡 Rising insurance costs push Fannie and Freddie to adjust mortgage rules. Inflation has skyrocketed so much that the mortgage giants are OK with insurance that only covers part of a roof replacement.

💼 Powell points out job growth is near zero. There's low demand for workers — but also a relatively low supply of them.

🤑 Wealthy shoppers are still "indulging." Macy's CEO says the top part of the K-shaped economy is still spending. At Macy's, anyway.

🏆 Gold drops as inflation concerns mount. Powell's comments and wholesale inflation data portend higher-for-longer stance.

⛽️ Gas prices hit their highest levels since March 2022. The national average of $3.84 is up nearly a dollar compared to last month.

See what else is trending on Yahoo Finance.


✂️ Rate cut hopes remain as the Fed's expectations change

Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on March 18, 2026. The US Federal Reserve kept interest rates unchanged Wednesday as expected, in defiance of President Donald Trump as the world's largest economy battles stubborn inflation, weak labor demand and an
Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York on March 18, 2026. (ANGELA WEISS / AFP via Getty Images) · ANGELA WEISS via Getty Images

Even before the war in Iran broke out, markets expected the Fed to continue its wait-and-see approach as it weighed a fragile yet steady labor market with stubborn inflation.

So when war caused an oil shock and the prospect of a growth scare — things that require two contrary remedies — more "wait-and-see" was a foregone conclusion.