NEW YORK, March 19, 2026, 13:16 EDT
Stocks stumbled on Thursday, with the Dow shedding about 460 points by midday. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq each slipped between 0.8% and 1% as a fresh surge in oil sent traders fleeing risk. Brent crude spiked above $119 a barrel early before pulling back toward $112. Over in small caps, the Russell 2000 dipped to a level 10% under its Jan. 22 high—a threshold many watchers use to mark a correction. Reuters
The timing stood out—landing straight after Wednesday’s Fed-fueled rout. S&P 500 dropped 1.4%, with the Dow off 1.6% and Nasdaq down 1.5%. A stronger-than-expected inflation report, along with Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s remarks, pushed traders to dial back expectations for any quick policy easing. AP News
The Fed’s policy statement called U.S. growth solid, while noting inflation was still running a bit high. The central bank also flagged uncertainty around how events in the Middle East could spill over into the U.S. economy. Fed Chair Jerome Powell followed up, saying officials are “prepared to do what needs to be done” if rising energy costs begin to push inflation higher. Federal Reserve
The updated projections made that shift clear. Fed officials are pegging both headline and core PCE inflation at 2.7% by year-end—the PCE measure being their go-to inflation gauge. Back in December, those numbers stood at 2.4% and 2.5%, with the unemployment rate still seen at 4.4%. Reuters
Morgan Stanley wasted no time, lining up with Goldman Sachs and Barclays to shift its Fed cut prediction to September, scrapping its previous June call. “A cautious Fed means delay,” the firm wrote. CME FedWatch, for its part, indicated traders are largely betting on rates staying put in September. Reuters
New labor numbers landed with little urgency for policymakers. Jobless claims dropped by 8,000 to 205,000 for the week ending March 14—a sign the job market remains sturdy, so the Fed isn’t under pressure to move fast. DOL
Chip stocks failed to cushion the market. Micron slid roughly 3.5% in early afternoon trading. This came despite the company projecting fiscal third-quarter revenue of $33.5 billion, give or take $750 million. Chief Executive Sanjay Mehrotra pointed to “new records” on revenue, margins, and earnings. Nvidia slipped around 1.3%. Micron Technology
Trading desks weren’t exactly placid either. “A whole lot of reasons to be nervous,” said Mark Spindel from Potomac River Capital. Over at Cresset, Jack Ablin pointed out Powell’s sharper focus on energy and tariffs. Meanwhile, Empower’s Marta Norton noted that anyone who’d banked on looser policy to juice stocks in the short run is now being forced to rethink that bet. Reuters
Energy remains the key swing factor. If crude prices pull back sharply, that relieves a major headache for markets. The tougher possibility is what the IMF highlighted Thursday: energy costs staying higher for longer, driving inflation up and dragging on global growth—a combination likely to keep the pressure on U.S. stocks. Reuters