From my vantage point — having devoted much of my original life to the systematic measurement of prices and the statistical decomposition of economic cycles — the present conjuncture presents a phenomenon of unusual analytical clarity. The 182 claims synthesized here converge on a singular, powerful macro narrative: energy-driven inflation has re-emerged as the dominant risk factor shaping global financial markets, with implications radiating across asset classes, central bank policy, corporate fundamentals, and investor sentiment in ways directly material for Alphabet Inc. and the broader technology sector.
The evidence base is remarkably consistent — spanning central bank officials, market strategists, economic data releases, and sentiment indicators across multiple geographies — and points to a self-reinforcing cycle. The Iran conflict-induced spike in oil prices is feeding through to broader inflation, constraining central bank flexibility, and recreating stagflationary dynamics reminiscent of an earlier era I studied closely in historical price data. While equity markets, particularly AI-driven technology names, have shown periodic resilience, the underlying macro fragility is reflected in persistent bearish sentiment, elevated volatility expectations, and a growing divergence between stock prices and the interest-rate-sensitive bond market — a divergence that, based on historical patterns, rarely resolves without significant adjustment.
The Energy Shock as Inflation Accelerant
The single most corroborated causal chain in this claim set runs from geopolitical conflict to energy prices to broad-based inflation. The war with Iran has driven oil above $122 per barrel 6,10, sending gas prices soaring 43 and contributing directly to the recent rise in inflation 42. Reuters energy editor Dmitry Zhdannikov has warned that the oil surge is expected to cause broad-based inflation across multiple sectors 39, while Reuters economics commentary notes that energy-related inflation, with a lag, could drive broader inflation higher 81.
This is not merely a U.S.-focused phenomenon. The same mechanism is observed across the eurozone, where ECB officials Gabriel Makhlouf 34,35 and Joachim Nagel 30 have flagged upside inflation risks that have "intensified" and now tilt decisively upward. The Bank of England's Chief Economist Huw Pill signaled increasing urgency about rising inflation risks 19, with analysis warning that soaring oil prices represent a significant risk to the UK inflation outlook 20 that could force faster monetary tightening 9,19. In India, elevated oil prices raise concerns about inflation, currency stability, and macroeconomic balances 27,66,85. Thailand faces similar risks 12, New Zealand posted a higher-than-expected Q1 inflation reading tied to the Middle East energy shock 74, and Latin American economies are experiencing higher inflation dynamics compared with developed markets 36. The concern at the IMF level is explicit: global inflation is climbing, creating risks to financial stability worldwide 23,50.
A critical analytical nuance, and one that warrants careful attention, is the cost-push, not demand-pull, nature of this inflation. The current inflationary pressures are predominantly supply-driven — originating from supply constraints, rising input costs, and international political disruptions — rather than from excess aggregate demand 38. This distinction matters enormously for policy: cost-push inflation is notoriously difficult for central banks to address without crushing growth, which is precisely the stagflationary risk that multiple sources independently flag.
The Stagflationary Trap
The most concerning macro scenario to emerge from this synthesis is the simultaneous presence of supply-driven inflation and slowing growth — the classic stagflationary mix that occupied much of my own analytical attention when studying 19th-century business cycles. Multiple sources independently arrive at this framing.
One analysis explicitly describes the combination of supply-driven inflation from oil and helium with market expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts as creating a stagflationary dynamic 54. Another characterizes the current environment as one where inflation is "not fully contained," potentially operating in a late-cycle or stagflationary phase 44. A stagflationary mix of rising energy prices, sticky inflation, and policy uncertainty is identified as currently present 61, and the combination of slowing economic growth, persistent inflation, and high energy costs creates the potential for a stagflationary scenario 57.
Bank of America has stated that markets are underestimating geopolitical consequences and remain fixated on inflation, failing to price in a potential global economic downturn 67,68. Federal Reserve official John Williams has explicitly noted that higher energy prices are contributing to inflationary pressures while simultaneously constraining economic growth 28 — in effect describing stagflation from within the central bank. An energy price shock is compounding inflation at a time when the economy may simultaneously need monetary support 47, and the oil price shock is creating uncertainty and clouding the US Federal Reserve's economic outlook 22.
Historically, oil price shocks have frequently triggered recessions through inflation-led interest rate hikes 65, and rising fuel costs are one of multiple indicators cited as increasing recession risk 1. This historical pattern — which I documented in my own work on commercial fluctuations — deserves particular weight when assessing forward probabilities.
Central Bank Policy: Hawkish Pivot and "Higher for Longer"
The inflation narrative has directly forced a reassessment of monetary policy expectations across developed-market central banks. The evidence here is unusually convergent, and I note it with the same methodological rigor I applied to 19th-century price indices.
Market-implied odds of interest rate increases are rising, corroborated by two sources 51. Bond prices were declining due to central-bank hawkishness and energy-driven inflation 81, with U.S. Treasury bond prices sharply lower and yields pushing higher as central banks react to energy-related inflation pressure 81. The week-over-week increase in breakeven rates reflects shifting market sentiment regarding inflation outlook and monetary policy expectations 29,45.
At the Fed, official Miran is turning more hawkish on inflation developments 16, a key official warned that a series of interest rate hikes could be needed if price shocks from the Middle East war prove larger than expected 32, and markets are pricing persistent Federal Reserve interest rate hike risk 81. The market has been drifting toward more hawkish expectations 84, and President Donald Trump has stated he has been in favor of interest rate increases to stop inflation 14. Jamie Dimon warned that persistent inflation could keep Federal Reserve interest rates elevated for longer than currently anticipated 26.
The ECB and Bank of England face similar pressures. Investors expect hawkish rhetoric from major central banks, with the European Central Bank and the Bank of Japan described as ready to tackle inflation 64. ECB official Joachim Nagel cited concerns about the current inflationary environment as rationale for potential tightening 30, while TD Securities strategist Pooja Kumra said the ECB is facing challenges in managing inflation and market expectations 41. G7 central banks are holding interest rates as energy-driven inflation risks persist 2. The Bank of England MPC may need to tighten faster than previously anticipated 19, and investors are on alert for any signals suggesting higher borrowing costs may be coming 21.
The mechanism is clear and mechanically robust: energy-driven inflation may prompt more aggressive central-bank tightening, leading to materially higher interest rates 68,81. Higher oil prices impact the broader interest rate environment by increasing inflation expectations 37 and reduce central banks' policy flexibility 49. If interest rate cuts occur, one contrarian analyst warns double-digit inflation would result 11, while others note that further rate hikes could accelerate downside risks for risk assets 24.
Crucially for the technology sector, persistent above-target inflation increases the probability of a 'higher for longer' interest rate scenario, which is a tail risk for highly leveraged companies and growth stocks 8 — a framing directly relevant to Alphabet and the broader technology ecosystem.
Market Sentiment: Fear Beneath the Surface
The sentiment data reveals a deeply conflicted market environment — one that, in my estimation, exhibits the statistical signature of regime uncertainty rather than genuine conviction.
The CNN Fear & Greed Index provides a fascinating narrative arc across these claims: it was at 12 (extreme fear) on April 6 63,64, rose to 38 on April 12 70, shifted to "Greed" territory at approximately 68-71 by mid-April 16,53,73, but with the overall indicator noted as having been at "extreme" readings 3,62. The VIX of approximately 17.8 reflected moderate anxiety ahead of key earnings and the Fed meeting 87, while another indicator suggested expectations of rapidly increasing equity market volatility 76. The range of Fear & Greed Index readings cited — from 8 to 71 over a compressed period — suggests rapid sentiment gyrations that could signal either healthy market adjustment or, more concerningly, underlying instability.
Market participants exhibit a persistent divergence between bearish investor sentiment and rising equity prices 46,69. Investors are "refusing to build long-term spot exposure" to Bitcoin amid Iran conflict uncertainty and inflation fears that limit the Fed's room to cut rates 79. Retail investors are ignoring risks while institutional investors actively hedge 80. Market participants are exhibiting hesitation and a cautious mood ahead of near-term catalysts 75, and investor sentiment across financial markets is weakening 71.
Some contributors suggest that market resilience is partly driven by investor hope, lack of alternatives, FOMO, and anticipation of more positive inflation 48. This "there is no alternative" (TINA) dynamic provides some support for equities but is, as one source notes, driven by currency debasement fears rather than traditional valuation metrics 52. However, Bank of America warns that markets are fixated on inflation and not adequately considering the risk of a global economic downturn 68, while others note that market prices have largely ignored rising inflation and an economic slowdown 59.
This paradox — markets priced for resilience while investors individually express fear — is itself an important finding and may indicate fragility rather than stability. The divergence between bond market pricing (hawkish, higher yields) and equity market pricing (resilient, AI-driven) 81 is a classic warning signal of regime shift risk that any serious analyst of financial history would recognize.
The Inflation-Rate-Tech Nexus
The most significant implication for Alphabet Inc. specifically lies in the feedback loop between inflation, interest rates, and technology sector valuation. This is where the measurement science I devoted my career to becomes directly relevant to investment decision-making.
Inflation-driven corporate earnings lead to higher interest rates and tighter financial conditions, creating a self-reinforcing macro headwind 15. Rising interest rates tend to reduce investor appetite for speculative and emerging-technology investments 17 — a finding corroborated by two sources and directly relevant to the AI investment narrative that has been the primary driver of technology sector valuations.
A particularly critical insight emerges from two sources that explicitly warn: if hyperscalers force capital expenditure through constraints, it could fuel a persistent inflation–interest-rate feedback loop resulting in higher inflation and higher interest rates 81. Other markets appear worried about the scenario that forced hyperscaler spending could drive higher inflation and rates 81. This is a finding of the first importance: the very AI infrastructure buildout that Alphabet is pursuing could, in this macro environment, be perceived as contributing to inflationary pressure rather than as a pure growth opportunity. Investor jitters about the sustainability of the AI investment boom contributed to negative market sentiment 77, and investors are concerned about potentially low returns on outsized infrastructure investments 82 — a concern that directly implicates Alphabet's substantial capital expenditure trajectory.
Rising inflation reduces consumer and enterprise purchasing power and can potentially dampen demand for technology products and services 31 — a direct demand-side risk for Alphabet's advertising and cloud businesses. Meanwhile, inflation is eroding real yields across bonds, treasuries, and cash 50, which is causing some investors to shift allocations from cash into equities as a hedge against inflation and dollar depreciation 52.
Corporate and Consumer Stress
The inflation transmission mechanism to the real economy is well-documented across these claims, and I present the evidence with appropriate attention to measurement reliability.
Consumer spending in the digital retail sector is under pressure from persistent inflation 18, and inflationary pressure on consumer spending is identified as a key risk resulting from energy costs 13. Consumer sentiment is at record lows combined with elevated inflation, pressuring real returns for income investors 60. A Gallup poll found that inflation and the cost of energy, housing, and healthcare are the leading financial concerns cited by American families 7 — a finding that carries direct implications for consumer-facing revenue streams.
Corporate impacts are uneven but significant. Debt-ridden companies are disadvantaged when inflation and the cost of debt rise 48, while cash-rich companies tend to benefit 48. This bifurcation is important for assessing which companies in the technology ecosystem are resilient versus vulnerable. The NFIB report stated that inflation will become even more of a problem as oil prices respond to developments in the Iran conflict 55, implying direct small-business stress. Inflation creates significant financial strain on consumers and businesses 5, and the combination of tariffs, energy prices, and higher services costs is keeping U.S. inflation elevated 61 (corroborated by two sources). Trade policy shifts and supply-chain disruptions are contributing to persistent inflationary pressure on consumer goods, ending the era of cheap imported products 78.
A notable spillover that warrants mention: rising fears of a private credit crisis have emerged as firms central to a growing but less liquid bond market face investor redemptions 83 — a systemic risk that could amplify any credit-driven correction and which I flag as a second-order concern deserving of monitoring.
Regional Divergence and Uneven Exposure
While inflation is a global phenomenon, the claims reveal important regional asymmetries that matter for any globally diversified enterprise. Emerging markets are being hit harder by inflation and cost pressures 58. Latin American economies are experiencing higher inflation dynamics compared to developed markets 36. India faces a particularly acute triple threat of inflation, currency weakness, and margin compression 85. The UK is vulnerable to energy-driven inflation with direct housing market consequences 25,40. France reported zero GDP growth in Q1 2026 combined with persistent energy inflation, worrying financial markets 56.
This regional divergence matters for Alphabet as a globally diversified company with advertising and cloud revenue exposed to all these markets. When oil prices declined, analysts cited the Brent crude decline as easing inflation and currency concerns for import-dependent economies 72,86 — underscoring how sensitive the macro outlook remains to the trajectory of energy prices.
Contradictions, Outliers, and Measurement Caveats
No statistical synthesis would be complete without acknowledging the claims that resist neat categorization. The assertion that inflation is "bullish for nominal assets" 4 stands as a contrarian outlier against the overwhelmingly bearish framing of inflation across the remaining sources. The claim that a contrarian analyst on Bluesky expects double-digit inflation if rate cuts occur 11 lacks corroboration and should be treated as a tail-risk scenario, not a base case.
There is also meaningful tension between multiple sources suggesting equity markets are ignoring inflation risks 59,69,81 and other sources showing significant investor anxiety 71. As I have noted, this paradox — markets priced for resilience while investors individually express fear — is itself an important finding and may indicate fragility rather than stability.
Analysis and Significance for Alphabet Inc.
For Alphabet Inc., this inflation-dominated macro environment creates a set of interconnected headwinds and opportunities that, in my assessment, are not fully priced into current valuations. The core tension is between the AI narrative and the macro reality.
The technology sector, led by hyperscalers like Alphabet, is pursuing an unprecedented capital expenditure cycle driven by the AI opportunity. However, the same energy shock that is boosting demand for AI-optimized cloud services (as enterprises seek efficiency gains) is simultaneously creating the inflation and interest rate conditions that compress the valuation multiples on those investments. Two sources explicitly warn that the hyperscaler spending boom could itself fuel an inflation-interest-rate feedback loop 81 — meaning Alphabet's own capital allocation strategy could become a macro headwind.
Advertising revenue faces direct demand-side pressure. Persistent inflation reduces consumer and enterprise purchasing power 31, and consumer spending in the digital retail sector is under pressure 18. Alphabet's core advertising business is cyclically sensitive; if the stagflationary scenario materializes with slowing growth and persistent inflation, advertisers typically reduce spending. The Gallup finding that inflation and energy costs are the leading financial concerns for American families 7 suggests the consumer environment is deteriorating even if recent earnings have not fully reflected this.
Cloud revenue may prove more resilient but carries its own risks. Enterprise demand for cloud infrastructure and AI services could benefit from businesses seeking efficiency gains in an inflationary environment. However, the cost of capital for Alphabet's own massive capex program rises alongside interest rates, and rising electricity costs 33 — a significant input for data center operations — are contributing to inflationary pressures. The concerns expressed by multiple sources about low returns on outsized infrastructure investments 82 directly implicates Alphabet's substantial annual capex trajectory.
Currency exposure is a double-edged sword. Dollar depreciation concerns are driving asset allocation 52, and while a weaker dollar benefits Alphabet's international revenue translation, it also exacerbates imported inflation in its end markets. The inflation-driven Fed hawkishness that strengthens the dollar would have the opposite effect.
The balance sheet provides a buffer. Alphabet's cash-rich position 48 is a relative advantage in an environment where debt-ridden companies are disadvantaged 48. However, persistent above-target inflation and "higher for longer" rates 8 remain tail risks for growth stocks irrespective of balance sheet strength, as higher discount rates mechanically reduce the present value of the distant cash flows that characterize Alphabet's AI investment thesis — a mechanical relationship I can state with considerable confidence based on first principles of asset pricing.
The most significant risk is a regime change in market pricing. If markets reprice from an AI-narrative-led to an inflation-narrative-led framework, the compressed valuations for long-duration technology assets could be severe. The claim that "other markets appear worried about inflation scenarios even as stocks appear to ignore them" 81 suggests that the bond market is already pricing a scenario that equity markets have not yet fully discounted. This disconnect is, based on historical precedent, a precursor to volatility events.
Key Takeaways
-
Energy-driven inflation is the single most important macro variable for Alphabet's near-to-medium-term outlook. The Iran conflict-induced oil shock is propagating through global inflation, central bank policy, and consumer demand in ways that directly affect advertising revenue, cloud growth, and the cost of capital for Alphabet's AI infrastructure investments. Any escalation in the conflict or sustained oil prices above $120/bbl would materially worsen the macro headwinds.
-
Stagflation risk is real and increasing but not the base case — though it would be severely negative for Alphabet. The simultaneous presence of supply-driven inflation, slowing growth, and constrained central bank policy creates a classic stagflationary configuration. In such a scenario, Alphabet would face simultaneous pressure on advertising revenue (cyclical), compression on valuation multiples (rate-driven), and rising skepticism about AI capex returns. The market's current resilience may reflect an underestimation of this risk.
-
The bond-equity divergence is a warning signal that demands attention. Fixed-income markets are pricing hawkish central bank responses and higher-for-longer rates, while equity markets remain supported by the AI narrative and TINA dynamics. This divergence 81 is historically unstable and suggests a material risk of repricing. Investors in Alphabet should monitor breakeven rates, real yields, and Fed commentary as leading indicators of a potential regime shift.
-
Alphabet's balance sheet strength is a relative advantage, but it does not immunize the stock from macro-driven multiple compression. Persistent above-target inflation increases the probability of higher-for-longer rates, which directly reduces the present value of the long-duration cash flows that underpin growth stock valuations. The framework for Alphabet should incorporate scenario analysis that weights the probability of a hawkish Fed surprise, a stagflationary outcome, or an oil-price-driven recession — any of which would create a more challenging environment for the shares than the current market pricing suggests.
Sources
1. U.S.-Iran war ‘tax’ begins to hit American businesses and consumers - 2026-04-04
2. 🚨 Even with a ceasefire in place, inflation risks won't be fading away Here’s why the G7 central ba... - 2026-04-09
3. r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Fundamentals Friday Apr 17, 2026 - 2026-04-17
4. S&P 500 hits new all-time high as investors shrug off Iran war oil price spike - 2026-04-15
5. Inflation bites, unemployment rises, costs spike, yet how banks make billions? #Inflation #Banking ... - 2026-04-29
6. Brent Oil just broke $122 bbl #Ukraine #News #Politics #Nato #War #ww3 #Weapons #Drones #Military #... - 2026-04-29
7. Latest poll sows that #affordability is the most concerning financial issue facing American families... - 2026-04-29
8. Monthly #PCE inflation data will be released tomorrow. Our #inflation nowcasting model (updated dail... - 2026-04-29
9. 📊 #Inflation "The UK risks finding itself on the brink of recession as a result of the Iran war, a ... - 2026-04-29
10. As a result of the energy price shock due to the Iran war, #inflation is back, the only question is ... - 2026-04-29
11. DON'T expect any interest rate cuts this year, or, if you do then DO expect double-digit #inflation ... - 2026-04-29
12. Thailand’s central bank held interest rates steady as rising energy costs and geopolitical tensions ... - 2026-04-29
13. Iran news continues to be BEARISH for the S&P PART 2 - 2026-04-05
14. r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Apr 21, 2026 - 2026-04-21
15. r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Options Trading Thursday - Apr 23, 2026 - 2026-04-23
16. r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Options Trading Thursday - Apr 16, 2026 - 2026-04-16
17. @Gensynai is a decentralized #AI compute network that connects machine learning developers with dist... - 2026-04-29
18. Google Ads Manager for Ecommerce Course in Sarrià-Sant Gervasi, Barcelona Archyde An ecommerce firm ... - 2026-05-01
19. 📊BoE’s Pill signals urgency 👀 Inflation risks rising → policy may tighten faster But MPC stays flexi... - 2026-05-01
20. As pretty much expected, Bank of England holds #interestrates at 3.75% What next with BoE #WaitandS... - 2026-04-30
21. What can we expect from the Bank of England today on #interestrates? The Gulf conflict and #OilCrisi... - 2026-04-30
22. Oil shock clouds US Federal Reserve outlook, Asia at risk yespunjab.com?p=245462 #FederalReserve #... - 2026-04-30
23. 8/9 Financial stability is at risk as global inflation climbs. 🏦 In the UK, interest rates are now p... - 2026-04-23
24. UK government bond yields are on the rise today, pushed up by persistent geopolitical tensions and d... - 2026-04-20
25. Rising mortgage costs dent buyer demand amid ‘housing market mood shift’ uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/... - 2026-04-09
26. Iran war #inflationrisk grows as #JPMorgan CEO #JamieDimon warns higher prices could keep #Fedrates ... - 2026-04-08
27. RBI Holds Rates at 6.5% as Iran War Raises Risk: RBI left repo at 6.5% on Apr 8, 2026; Brent rose ~1... - 2026-04-08
28. Fed’s Williams: higher energy prices impacting both #inflation & growth⚠️Policy path gets more compl... - 2026-04-03
29. 5Y Breakeven Inflation Rate at 2.67%, up from 2.61% last week; 10Y Breakeven Inflation at 2.46%. Bre... - 2026-05-01
30. The President of the Bundesbank hints at a potential interest rate hike in June #Bu... - 2026-05-01
31. Oil briefly spikes past $126 a barrel, pushing US inflation to highest since May 2023, as California... - 2026-05-01
32. Fed official warns Friday that a series of rate hikes may be needed if Middle East war sparks larger... - 2026-05-01
33. Watch this quick video on spiking local marginal pricing on the PJM grid to understand why electrici... - 2026-05-01
34. 📊 #Inflation "European Central Bank Governing Council member Gabriel Makhlouf said yesterday’s init... - 2026-05-01
35. 📊 #Inflation "European Central Bank Governing Council member Gabriel Makhlouf said yesterday’s init... - 2026-05-01
36. Stablecoins surpass Bitcoin in purchases across Latin America May 01 2026 07:25 UTC #stablecoins #la... - 2026-05-01
37. 🚨 Oil at US$120 is a spike – the shift behind it isn’t⚡️ stockhead.com.au/experts/oil-... @stockhe... - 2026-05-01
38. If today’s #inflation is largely cost-push and #geopolitical, then excessive monetary tightening can... - 2026-05-01
39. How the oil surge will make everything more expensive From flights to groceries, the surge in oil p... - 2026-05-01
40. 🚨 "The Bank of England needs to be honest and flag the risk of stagflation in the UK," says deVere C... - 2026-04-30
41. 📊 #Inflation "Pooja Kumra, TD Securities European & UK Rates Senior Strategist, discussed the Europ... - 2026-04-30
42. Key inflation gauge jumps to highest level in 3 years as Iran war spikes gas prices apnews.com/artic... - 2026-04-30
43. Key #inflation gauge jumps to highest level in 3 years as #GasPrices soared, the latest sign that th... - 2026-04-30
44. Bank of England holds key rate steady, warns of possible future hikes as Middle East conflict stokes... - 2026-04-30
45. Oil prices surged on geopolitical tensions while U.S. stocks held near record levels, as strong corp... - 2026-04-30
46. The Rally Nobody Believes In - 2026-04-27
47. The Fed subtly signaled that only rate cuts are on the table. Some Fed officials are crying foul - 2026-05-01
48. Markets rise despite geopolitical challenges | Karen Ward posted on the topic | LinkedIn - 2026-04-20
49. What today’s headlines may actually mean for investors: China transport strength, AI optimism, and the oil risk underneath - 2026-04-29
50. Why there is hope that 2026 will be positive for the overall market ? - 2026-04-23
51. r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Options Trading Thursday - Apr 30, 2026 - 2026-04-30
52. Why the Market Makes No Sense Right Now - 2026-04-25
53. We are nearing Extreme Greed... yet $VIX is up - 2026-04-21
54. Will helium supply problems hit the stock market? - 2026-04-14
55. Economy - 2026-04-15
56. Economic stagnation and state authority tensions at the heart of the evening (04/30/2026) - pressebot.fr - 2026-04-30
57. US stocks rally to the finish of their best month since 2020, even as oil prices whipsaw - 2026-04-30
58. Your laundry bill is about to get more expensive—and Unilever says the Iran war is partly to blame - 2026-04-30
59. Volatility across the Magnificent 7 | BusinessNow.mt - 2026-04-16
60. Understanding Risk, Probability The Ghost in the Curve: The Fat Tail Trap: - 2026-04-13
61. Quarterly Market Update - 2026-04-22
62. Markets (Closed) Cryptos, Metals, Markets to open, Biz and Culture April 6, 2026 Sydney, Australia... - 2026-04-06
63. Markets (Closed), Cryptos, Metals, Markets and Culture April 6, 2026 Sydney, Australia to Wall Str... - 2026-04-06
64. Markets, Cryptos, Metals, Biz and Pop Culture April 7, 2026 Sydney, Australia to Wall Street, New ... - 2026-04-06
65. News, Markets, Biz, Metals and Culture: Australia and World All's Fair In Love, War, Sports Enterta... - 2026-04-07
66. Indian markets open under pressure, as Sensex plunges over 800 points and Nifty slips below 22,800 a... - 2026-04-07
67. Markets, Cryptos, Biz and Culture April 9, 2026 Sydney, Australia to Wall Street, New York The Wo... - 2026-04-09
68. Markets, Cryptos, Biz and Culture April 11, 2026 Sydney, Australia to Wall Street, New York The W... - 2026-04-11
69. @SoSoValueCrypto Observing the disconnection between #AI narrative and macroeconomic fears is capti... - 2026-04-12
70. Islamabad talks failed. Blockade is active. Mines being cleared by force. This is not a drill. $SPX ... - 2026-04-12
71. 📉 Investor sentiment weakens 🔥 Inflation fears rising 🌍 Growth outlook falling Iran tensions are res... - 2026-04-14
72. $SPX The S&P 500 surged to fresh record highs, extending its bullish momentum after reclaiming the ... - 2026-04-17
73. Macro update: From Extreme Fear to Greed! The CNN Fear & Greed Index has surged to 68/100. Inves... - 2026-04-19
74. ICYMI O/N IRAN: A Pakistani source told Reuters there was momentum for US/Iran talks to recommenc... - 2026-04-21
75. Wall Street hesitates this Monday in a cautious mood ahead of a key week of earnings, economic data and... - 2026-04-27
76. Volatility could pick up fast this week. 🚨 $GOOGL and $NVDA just hit NEW ATHs! Fed decision, PCE in... - 2026-04-28
77. Wall Street indices like the S&P 500 and Nasdaq dipped amid investor jitters over the AI investm... - 2026-04-29
78. When alliances are transactional rather than values-based, trade relationships become weapons. Tarif... - 2026-04-29
79. Bitcoin $BTC spot trading volumes have crashed to their lowest levels since September 2023. Binance... - 2026-05-01
80. 🇨🇳 Huawei AI Chip Orders Hit $12B — China Ditches Nvidia at Scale Chinese firms are accelerating do... - 2026-05-01
81. The Stock Market is at Record Highs Again. Can This Really Keep Going? - 2026-05-01
82. Big Tech stocks suddenly look cheap - 2026-04-07
83. How bond market's private credit crisis fears are playing out in fixed-income ETFs - 2026-04-11
84. Bank of America sends frank message on next Fed rate cut - 2026-04-11
85. Failed peace talks, Trump's Hormuz blockade order keep market volatile; Sensex and Nifty fall up to 1% - 2026-04-13
86. Stock Markets Rally: Sensex Climbs 500 Pts Amid Easing Geopolitical Tensions - 2026-04-17
87. Wall Street futures mixed ahead of big tech earnings, Fed meeting - 2026-04-29