Stock market today: Dow surges 1,000 points, S&P 500 and Nasdaq soar after Iranian leader signals openness to negotiations

Mar 31, 2026
stock-market-today:-dow-surges-1,000-points,-s&p-500-and-nasdaq-soar-after-iranian-leader-signals-openness-to-negotiations

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US stocks surged in afternoon trading on Tuesday after the Iranian president, Masoud Pezeshkian, signaled that the regime may be willing to negotiate toward an end to the war that has ravaged the global energy market.

Stocks were already in the green earlier in the session after President Trump reportedly told administration officials that he would be willing to end the war in Iran without a full reopening of the Strait of Hormuz and said that the war won’t last “much longer.”

The S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose 2.5%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) traded up by 2.2%, or roughly 1,000 points. The tech-exposed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) gained a stronger 3.5%.

In comments reported by regional media, Pezeshkian said on Monday that any end to the war that has consumed the Middle East must “guarantee the security and interests of the Iranian people,” according to Turkish media.

Bloomberg reported that Pezeshkian also told EU Council President António Costa on Monday that Iran has “the necessary will to end this war” but expects certain guarantees in exchange.

Trump has repeatedly threatened to reopen the strait by force. But on Tuesday morning, the US president seemed prepared to wind down aggressive military action, posting on Truth Social, “Iran has been, essentially, decimated. The hard part is done.”

Oil prices plunged on hopes that the end of the war may be drawing closer. Futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, fell by 3.4% to trade below $104 per barrel, while those on US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude (CL=F) shed 2.5% to trade around $100.30 per barrel. On Tuesday, US gas prices at the pump crossed over $4 per gallon nationally, according to data from AAA.

LIVE 16 updates

  • Ines Ferré

    Airlines face price hikes, lower margins as high oil prices pressures business

    Yahoo Finance’s Jose Velasquez reports:

    Read more here.

  • Ines Ferré

    Kansas City Fed’s Schmid suggests Fed shouldn’t look through oil shock

    Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:

    Read more here.

  • Ines Ferré

    Gold bounces on hopes of swift end to war

    Gold (GC=F) was on track for its worst month in more than a decade as the precious metal took an outsized hit since the start of the Middle East conflict.

    Gold futures bounced nearly 3% to hover near $4,670 per ounce on Tuesday, though they were on track for their biggest monthly loss since 2013.

    Some analysts believe the outsized moves in March may have marked a low point, with the metal having reached $4,100 last week.

    “Bottoms are always a process, and I do believe we are in the middle of one,’ wrote Octavio Costa, founder & CEO of Azuria Capital, on Tuesday.

  • Jake Conley

    Oil plunges, stocks soar on signals that Iran leadership may be open to ending war

    Oil prices plunged through afternoon trading on Tuesday after regional media reported that Iranian leadership had signaled that they may be open to negotiations to end the war — the first such move from the regime since the start of the conflict.

    In comments first published by the state news agency IRNA and reported by regional media, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said on Monday that any end to the war that has consumed the Middle East must “guarantee the security and interests of the Iranian people,” according to Turkish media.

    Bloomberg reported that Pezeshkian said, on a call with EU Council President António Costa on Monday, that Iran has “the necessary will to end this war” but expects certain guarantees in exchange.

    Futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, fell by more than 3.1% to trade at $104 per barrel, while those on US benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude (CL=F) shed 2% to fall below $101 per barrel.

    At the same time, US equities turned sharply north. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained roughly 2.4%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) picked up 2% on the session, or roughly 900 points. The tech-exposed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) saw the strongest gain, returning 3.5%.

  • Jake Conley

    High energy prices likely to weigh on consumer spending this year, Moody’s and Goldman Sachs say

    Surging energy costs driven by the war in Iran are leaving US households increasingly vulnerable to price pressures, analysts from Goldman Sachs and Moody’s said in reports released this week.

    “Although US households’ finances are generally intact, spending growth remains modest and increasingly uneven, leaving consumption more exposed to renewed energy price pressures stemming from the Middle East conflict,” the Moody’s analysts wrote.

    Recent retail sales data show modest growth in spending, with core retail sales increasing by 0.3% in January even as the headline figure ticked down by 0.2%, according to Goldman Sachs. That said, “spending headwinds from higher inflation due to the recent energy price surge are likely to weigh on spending growth for the rest of the year,” Goldman’s analysts wrote.

    The bank is forecasting 2026 real PCE spending growth forecast at 1.3% on a fourth quarter-over-fourth quarter basis, compared to 2025’s growth of 2.1%.

    Moody’s analysts also note that energy price hikes impact middle- and lower-income households disproportionately, which will “exacerbate consumption’s dependence on affluent households.” The analysts said that the dynamic may be problematic for spending growth, since affluent households’ confidence can “quickly erode” during equity market volatility, like the swings driven by the war in Iran.

    “While household consumption remains the primary driver of US economic growth, the ongoing Middle East conflict and resulting surge in oil prices are testing its resilience,” the Moody’s analysts wrote.

    Consumer sentiment data released Tuesday morning by the Conference Board surprised to the upside, though the report still showed that concerns of higher prices coming down the pike are weighing on American households.

  • Stocks on the move: Apellis Pharmaceutical, CoreWeave, Marvell, Constellation Energy

    Many individual stocks saw large moves on Tuesday as markets staged a comeback amid seemingly de-escalatory rhetoric from the White House about the war in Iran.

    Volatility, as measured by the CBOE Volatility Index (^VIX), retreated to 27 but still remained well above 20 — a reading that indicates elevated fear levels.

    Here’s a look at some of the biggest movers Yahoo Finance users were viewing:

    Apellis Pharmaceutical (APLS) stock skyrocketed 135% after pharmaceutical giant Biogen (BIIB) agreed to buy the company for $5.6 billion, or $41 per share, a 139% premium to Apellis stock’s Monday closing price. As part of the acquisition, Biogen will gain access to Apellis’ bestselling immune disorder treatment, Syfovre, and a drug that treats rare kidney and blood diseases called Empaveli.

    CoreWeave (CRWV) stock jumped more than 5% as the Nvidia-backed (NVDA) company secured $8.5 billion in ‌financing to expand its artificial intelligence cloud platform, bringing CoreWeave’s total debt financing over the past year to $28 billion.

    Marvell (MRVL) held on to gains of over 7% following the announcement of a $2 billion Nvidia investment.

    Constellation Energy (CEG) disappointed investors on Tuesday by not announcing new data center deals at an investor event as widely expected, sending the stock 8% lower. The purveyor of clean energy products and services gave two reasons for the caution: greater scrutiny on data center development from communities and changes to hyperscalers’ power purchase agreements due to a pledge they signed with the White House.

  • Jake Conley

    Consumer confidence ticks up in March, per Conference Board data

    Consumer confidence ticked up in March, rising over the previous month and outperforming economists’ expectations, according to data released by the Conference Board on Tuesday.

    The Conference Board’s consumer confidence gauge rose to 91.8 from 91.2 the previous month, against expectations of 87.9. The reading on the present situation also rose month over month to 123.3 from 120, outperforming economist expectations of 118.

    Bucking the trend, readings on consumer expectations, a forward-facing metric, fell to 70.9 in March from 72 the previous month. Though the gauge still outperformed expectations of 68.4.

    The readings are a positive sign for consumer sentiment, which tends to suffer during oil shocks that raise gas prices. On Tuesday morning, the national average for gasoline crossed over $4 per gallon, according to AAA data.

    In a client note on Tuesday, Goldman Sachs strategists noted that consumer sentiment, as measured by the University of Michigan, has fallen below levels seen during the 2001 tech bubble and during the depths of the 2008 financial crisis.

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    US hiring rate falls in February to lowest mark since April 2020

    February saw the lowest hiring rate since April 2020 in the depths of the pandemic, at 3.1%, according to Labor Department data released Tuesday. US hires for the month fell to 4.8 million, down 387,000 year over year.

    Yahoo Finance’s Emma Ockerman reports:

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    US stocks rise at the opening bell

    US stocks turned up at the opening bell on Tuesday after President Trump told administration officials that he was considering winding down military presence in Iran without resolving control over the Strait of Hormuz, per the Wall Street Journal

    The S&P 500 (^GSPC) and Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) ticked up by 1.1% and 0.9%, respectively. The tech-exposed Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) rose by a stronger 1.3%.

    In a social media post Tuesday morning, the US president seemingly signaled his willingness to wind down aggressive military action, counteracting previous escalatory language on Monday.

    “Iran has been, essentially, decimated,” Trump posted on Truth Social, addressing other countries. “The hard part is done. Go get your own oil!”

    Oil rose Tuesday morning despite the president’s comments. US benchmark West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) crude climbed above $103 per barrel as the US-Israeli war against Iran entered its fifth week, while the international benchmark crossed $117.

    Investors will get the March consumer confidence reading and the February Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) on Tuesday, in what should be a read on US consumer health. In a bearish sign for consumer sentiment, US gas prices at the pump crossed $4 per gallon nationally early Tuesday morning, according to data from AAA. Diesel prices averaged $5.45 per gallon.

  • Claire Boston

    Home prices rose in January, before the Iran War pushed mortgage rates higher

    Home prices rose slightly to start the year, but the latest reading was taken before fallout from the Iran War began pushing mortgage rates higher.

    The S&P Cotality Case-Shiller 20-City Home Price Index, which measures prices in the nation’s largest metro areas, rose 1.18% in January from a year earlier, and 0.16% from December.

    The meager gains reflect the housing market’s low-supply, low-demand dynamics. First-time homebuyers continue to struggle with affordability, while many would-be sellers put off moving and hang on to their ultra-low mortgage rates.

    The data reflects home sales that closed between late 2025 and early 2026, when mortgage rates were hovering near multiyear lows in the low 6% area, a worrying sign for future housing activity. Since then, mortgage rates have climbed rapidly over the last month and averaged around 6.55% on Monday, according to Mortgage News Daily.

  • Marvell stock surges on $2 billion Nvidia investment

    Marvell Technology (MRVL) stock jumped 8% in premarket trading after the data center infrastructure company announced it was joining Nvidia’s (NVDA) web of partners.

    Nvidia will invest $2 billion in Marvell as the companies collaborate on building AI factories and silicon photonics technology. Marvell will build custom accelerator chips (XPUs) compatible with Nvidia’s rack-scale infrastructure platforms to scale-up networking.

    “The inference inflection has arrived. Token generation demand is surging, and the world is racing to build AI factories,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said. “Together with Marvell, we are enabling customers to leverage NVIDIA’s AI infrastructure ecosystem and scale to build specialized AI compute.”

    Nvidia stock rose 1.5% half an hour before the opening bell.

  • Jake Conley

    Unilever to merge food business with spice leader McCormick in $44.8 billion deal

    Consumer goods giant Unilever will merge its food business with the spice maker McCormick in a deal valued at $44.8 billion, the companies confirmed on Tuesday — marking the latest tie-up in the consumer goods and food-and-beverage space.

    Our Brian Sozzi reports:

    Read more here.

  • Powell issues an ‘essential’ reminder about inflation expectations

    Investors often shrug off sentiment data for a variety of reasons: people think in messy, irrational, and contradictory ways. But on Monday, Fed Chair Jerome Powell explained why public opinion still matters for the central bank — and the markets by extension.

    Yahoo Finance’s Hamza Shaban writes in today’s Morning Brief newsletter:

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    US gas prices cross $4 per gallon nationally on Tuesday

    Gas prices crossed a national average of $4 per gallon early Tuesday morning as the war in Iran has continued to wrack the energy market, driving up oil prices around the globe.

    The average price at the pump across the US hit $4.02 on Tuesday, its highest level since August 2022, according to AAA data, after climbing more than $1 over the past month from $2.98

    This rise comes as the US-Iran war enters its fifth week and is the latest milestone to be reached by gas prices, which are now up about $1 on average from one month ago.

    Underlying oil prices on international Brent crude (BZ=F) and US West Texas Intermediate crude (CL=F) have surged by roughly 50% each over the past month since the war began. Futures on the two energy products were trading around $107.80 per barrel and $102 per barrel, respectively.

    On March 25, the Trump administration eased federal ethanol restrictions by issuing an emergency waiver for E15 gasoline, a move designed to increase the supply of a less expensive blend of fuel ahead of the warmer weather driving season. The White House also issued a temporary 60-day waiver on so-called “Jones Act” requirements that make domestic shipping more expensive.

    Neither move, however, has managed to truly pull gas prices back across the country.

    While consumers have had to shell out more money to fill up their vehicles over the past month, truckers have been paying even more. The national average for a gallon of diesel reached $5.45 on Tuesday.

  • Gold rises following reports Trump may be willing to end war with Hormuz closed

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

  • Oil rises following Iran hitting Kuwait oil tanker

    Bloomberg reports:

    Read more here.

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