Weekly Market Recap (March 16–20, 2026)
U.S. equities fell for a fourth straight week as the deepening Middle East conflict kept oil prices elevated and pushed investors toward a more defensive posture.
Rising crude, a stronger dollar, firmer Treasury yields, and growing discussion of a possible Fed hike combined to pressure nearly every major sector outside of energy.
Index Performance (Weekly)
| Index | Weekly Change |
|---|---|
| S&P 500 | −2.88% |
| Nasdaq | −3.25% |
| Dow Jones | −2.92% |
Sector Snapshot (1-Week)
Energy
+3.23%
Financial
−0.30%
Communication Services
−1.70%
Technology
−1.80%
Industrials
−1.91%
Healthcare
−2.80%
Consumer Cyclical
−3.18%
Real Estate
−3.98%
Consumer Defensive
−4.67%
Utilities
−4.90%
Basic Materials
−7.58%
The Score — What Drove the Market
- Fourth straight weekly decline: All three major U.S. indexes extended their losing streak as the market adjusted to a longer and more economically consequential conflict.
- Oil shock intensifies: Brent crude rose above $112, extending a massive monthly gain and reinforcing fears that energy costs will keep inflation elevated.
- Fed outlook shifts: Traders sharply reduced expectations for rate cuts and even began pricing in the possibility of a rate hike later this year.
- Rates and dollar pressure: Treasury yields climbed alongside the U.S. dollar, tightening financial conditions and weighing on most equity sectors.
- Credit stress concern: Redemption pauses and markdowns at some private-credit firms added to worries that higher energy prices could spill into broader financial instability.
Key Takeaway
The market is no longer treating the conflict as a brief geopolitical shock. With oil prices still climbing and rate-cut hopes fading, investors are increasingly pricing a stagflationary backdrop in which energy remains the main hedge and most other sectors stay under pressure.
Week ended March 20, 2026. Data based on provided figures.