Morning Brief: Labor market data vs. anecdotes

👋 Good morning! Stocks climbed even further on Wednesday after their very fat Tuesday amid hopes of continued deescalation between the US and Iran.

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.7%, the Dow (^DJI) 0.5%, and the Nasdaq (^IXIC) 1.2%.

Futures, however, dropped after President Trump's address Wednesday night after declaring the war will end "very shortly," but that other countries need to "take the lead" regarding the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz.

Though markets may appreciate the prospect of peace, the lack of resolution about a critical economic choke point may be troubling.

Yahoo Finance Morning Brief

On the agenda this morning:

💼 Labor market data vs. anecdotes

🎗️ The stock market has trust issues right now

🥵 Anthropic has an oopsie

🏦 The Fed is spelling it out clearly

🤖 One huge number

🔎 Google search runs our lives

📆 What we're watching Thursday: Markets will be digesting President Trump's address and the Iran situation as a light day on the calendar features Challenger's job cuts, exports, and jobless claims.


📰 What's on our radar

🛢️ Bank of America rips up economic forecasts, calls for "mild stagflation," and braces for $100 oil all year. Even if the war ends within weeks.

🚀 SpaceX files for IPO. It has a good shot at being the biggest IPO ever.

✈️ Why sky-high oil prices haven't shaken Wall Street's confidence in Delta stock: Some airlines are in the pilot's seat.

💊 Eli Lilly stock pops after FDA approves its new GLP-1 pill. The weight-loss drug, called Foundayo, will begin shipping on April 6, likely at $149/mo.

👟 Nike stock plunges to 11-year low after reporting its quarter. The sportswear giant noted stalling demand from China and war disruption. Though it was ready for a turnaround, global events keep tripping it up.

🍪 Intel stock jumps 9% on chip plant buyout news. The company is buying a plant in Ireland from Apollo. (Disclosure: Yahoo is a portfolio company of funds managed by affiliates of Apollo Global Management.)

🏦 The bond market is helping resolve the Fed's interest rate dilemma. Markets have already priced in a rate hike, doing the central bank's work for it.

🚗 Nissan Americas head says it's back. The past six months, its CEO says, have seen Nissan become the fastest-growing auto brand.

See what else is trending on Yahoo Finance.


💼 Labor market data vs. anecdotes

FILE - This June 18, 2012, file photo shows Oracle headquarters in Redwood City, Calif. The Labor Department is suing Oracle, claiming that the technology giant pays white male workers more than their non-white and female counterparts with the same job titles. In a statement issued Wednesday, Jan. 18, 2017, Oracle called the lawsuit
Oracle headquarters in Redwood City, Calif. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma, File) · ASSOCIATED PRESS

Oracle is reportedly slashing thousands of jobs as it searches for ways to pay for its AI spending. LinkedIn posts and reports from CNBC and BBC have pegged the number at potentially 10,000.