Morning Brief: Stocks roar back, plus our giant, action-packed Q1 roundup

👋 Good morning! And happy April. Congrats on making it through quite the quarter, everyone.

We'll say this up front: The Morning Brief does not do April Fool's Day.

Tuesday was an absolute blockbuster day in the markets, as stocks surged on optimism about an off-ramp from the Iran conflict.

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 2.9%, the Dow (^DJI) 2.5%, and the Nasdaq (^IXIC) 3.8%.

Once again, these are not typos or April foolishness. And our Jared Blikre reminds us that this does not dig us out of March's hole. The S&P 500 is still in the 6,500s.

Yahoo Finance Morning Brief

On the agenda this morning:

🇮🇷 Iran news lifts stocks

💼 Labor market check

📆 Our big quarterly roundup

🏈 Q1 stock scorecard

🏆 Q1's biggest winners and losers

🙋 5 questions we have for Q2

🤖 Our AI exec power rankings

📆 What we're watching Tuesday: Along with keeping an eye on Iran developments, we've got a lot of economic data coming down the pipe.

Labor market week continues with ADP's private payroll numbers, which we'll watch closely along with economic activity from ISM and S&P Global. To top off a big data day, retail sales will give us a look at consumer spending.


📰 What's on our radar

🍪 Super Micro is "uninvestable." Investors are running to the exits as a series of own-goals has turned a key AI play into a disaster.

🏃 The Whoop CEO just raised over half a billion. The next step is an IPO.

✈️ Airlines face price hikes, lower margins as Iran war pressures business. It's also creating a K-shaped economy for airlines, with Delta and United set to take advantage of the moment.

🤖 CoreWeave stock jumps 12% after company secures $8.5 billion GPU-backed loan. The Nvidia-backed company just pioneered a new kind of financing.

🙏 Consumer confidence posts surprise gain in March. But inflation concerns linger amid gas price surge.

🏆 Gold rallies, but the precious metal tracked its worst months since 2008. Nevertheless, Wall Street remains bullish.

🏦 The Fed shouldn't look through the oil shock, says Kansas City's Fed president. Jeff Schmid said on Tuesday that the oil shock's context amid broader inflation should change the Fed's perspective.

🇪🇺 ECB President Christine Lagarde calls out Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. After Bessent said the economic fallout of the conflict with Iran would be brief, Lagarde pushed back, noting that it would be anything but, given the destruction.

⚡️ Tesla Q1 deliveries expected to rebound slightly in challenging EV landscape. Thursday's data is expected to show an increase of 9% year over year.