Monday, March 23, 2026 | Published 7:00 AM PT | Data: Yahoo Finance
Section 1 — World Indices
| Index | Price | Change % | Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| IBOVESPA | 182,173 | +3.38% | Americas |
| Russell 2000 | 2,511.96 | +3.01% | Americas |
| Nasdaq Composite | 22,114 | +2.16% | Americas |
| Dow Jones 30 | 46,469 | +1.96% | Americas |
| S&P 500 | 6,630 | +1.90% | Americas |
| S&P/TSX Composite | 31,895 | +1.84% | Americas |
| EURO STOXX 50 | 5,650 | +2.71% | Europe |
| DAX | 22,966 | +2.62% | Europe |
| MSCI Europe | 2,573 | +2.26% | Europe |
| CAC 40 | 7,823 | +2.05% | Europe |
| FTSE 100 | 9,998 | +0.80% | Europe |
| S&P/ASX 200 | 8,366 | -0.74% | Asia |
| S&P BSE SENSEX | 72,696 | -2.46% | Asia |
| Nikkei 225 | 51,515 | -3.48% | Asia |
| Hang Seng | 24,382 | -3.54% | Asia |
| SSE Composite | 3,813 | -3.63% | Asia |
| KOSPI | 5,406 | -6.49% | Asia |
| VIX | 23.95 | -10.56% | — |
The Monday session is opening with a pronounced global bifurcation that strategists will be debating all week. The Western hemisphere is staging a sharp relief rally — the S&P 500 up 1.90%, the Nasdaq up 2.16%, Brazil’s IBOVESPA surging 3.38%, and Europe’s DAX adding 2.62% — while Asian markets experienced one of their worst collective sessions in months. The KOSPI’s -6.49% collapse is the single most alarming data point of the morning, raising serious questions about whether South Korean equities are pricing a regional shock that has not yet fully registered in US futures.
The Nikkei’s -3.48% decline and the Hang Seng’s -3.54% drop compound the concern. China’s SSE Composite falling 3.63% suggests that whatever the catalyst — whether renewed trade friction, currency stress, or a macro shock emanating from the region — it is broad-based across Northeast Asia. India’s SENSEX joining the sell-off at -2.46% removes any possibility of interpreting this as Korea-specific.
VIX at 23.95, down 10.56% on the session, is the critical counternarrative. A VIX above 20 still signals elevated uncertainty, but the sharp daily decline tells us that US options market participants are not reading the Asian rout as a contagion threat to domestic equities — at least not yet. For context, VIX at 24 is historically associated with moderate stress; a move above 30 would signal institutional hedging acceleration. The current level suggests this Monday open is a buy-the-dip session in US risk assets, not a flight-to-safety moment, though the divergence with Asia remains a tail risk worth monitoring into the week.
Section 2 — Futures & Commodities
| Asset | Price | Change % | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 (SPY proxy) | 660.88 | +1.90% | ✅ Bull |
| Nasdaq (QQQ proxy) | 594.02 | +2.18% | ✅ Bull |
| Russell 2000 (IWM proxy) | 249.14 | +2.86% | ✅ Bull |
| Crude Oil (WTI) | $88.78 | -9.18% | 🔴 Bear |
| Brent Crude | $100.70 | -10.24% | 🔴 Bear |
| Gold | $4,510.30 | -1.41% | ⚠️ Neutral |
| Silver | $70.79 | +1.62% | ✅ Bull |
| Copper (May 26) | $5.50 | +2.39% | ✅ Bull |
| Platinum (Apr 26) | $1,904.10 | -3.37% | 🔴 Bear |
| Natural Gas (Apr 26) | $2.9270 | -4.47% | 🔴 Bear |
| 10-Yr T-Note Futures | 110.86 | +0.33% | ✅ Bull |
| 2-Yr T-Note Futures | 103.66 | +0.12% | ✅ Bull |
The single most consequential commodity move this morning is crude oil’s near-double-digit collapse, with WTI plunging 9.18% to $88.78 and Brent crossing below $101 at -10.24%. Moves of this magnitude in crude are not noise — they represent fundamental repricing of the supply-demand equation. The most likely explanations are a combination of OPEC+ production increase signals, demand destruction fears from the Asian economic softness, and a weakening dollar that has historically provided crude with a floor that is now slipping.
Gold’s -1.41% decline to $4,510 is noteworthy for what it signals alongside the oil rout. In a true flight-to-safety environment, gold should be climbing as crude falls. Instead, gold is pulling back modestly, suggesting this session’s commodity selling is more supply-shock or demand-destruction driven than geopolitical fear driven. Copper’s +2.39% gain is the constructive outlier — the industrial metal’s strength directly contradicts a pure global slowdown narrative and suggests that manufacturing demand, particularly around electrification and AI infrastructure build-out, remains intact even as energy markets crater.
Silver’s +1.62% gain while gold falls is consistent with industrial demand holding up, further validating copper’s message. Natural gas falling 4.47% alongside crude reinforces that the energy complex is broadly under pressure, likely from a demand-side repricing as Asian growth expectations are revised lower following this morning’s regional equity carnage.
Section 3 — Bonds
| Instrument | Yield / Price | Change | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 30-Yr Treasury Yield | 4.903% | -5.7 bps | ✅ Rallying |
| 10-Yr Treasury Yield | 4.334% | -5.7 bps | ✅ Rallying |
| 5-Yr Treasury Yield | 3.950% | -6.2 bps | ✅ Rallying |
| 13-Wk T-Bill | 3.620% | +0.2 bps | Flat |
| TLT (20+ Yr Treasury ETF) | $86.51 | +0.79% | ✅ Bull |
| 10-Yr T-Note Futures | 110.86 | +0.33% | ✅ Bull |
| 2-Yr T-Note Futures | 103.66 | +0.12% | ✅ Bull |
Note: HYG and LQD not directly available in today’s Yahoo Finance feed; inferred from TLT and broader rate dynamics.
The bond market this morning is sending a clear and important signal: yields are falling across the curve even as equities rally. Normally, a strong equity open would pressure bonds as investors rotate out of fixed income into risk assets. The fact that the 10-year is pulling back to 4.334% and the 30-year is holding just below 4.903% while the S&P adds nearly 2% suggests bond buyers are treating this as a global risk-off signal — anchored in Asian contagion fears — even as US equity traders see a buying opportunity.
The 30-year Treasury flirting just below 5.0% remains the structural line in the sand for fixed income markets. At 4.903%, it is close enough to 5% that any re-acceleration in inflation data or fiscal concern could push it through that psychological threshold, which would create renewed pressure on long-duration assets, mortgage rates, and growth stock valuations. The 14-basis-point differential between the 5-year (3.950%) and 10-year (4.334%) shows a moderately normal upward slope in the belly and long end of the curve.
The 13-week T-bill at 3.62% remaining essentially flat while longer maturities rally represents a curve steepening bias. This is the pattern typical of markets beginning to discount Fed easing at some point in the medium term. TLT’s modest +0.79% gain suggests duration buyers are comfortable adding risk at these levels, but the absence of a dramatic TLT surge confirms that we are not in a true flight-to-quality panic.
Section 4 — Currencies
| Pair | Rate | Change % | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| EUR/USD | 1.1639 | +0.55% | ✅ EUR Strength |
| USD/JPY | 158.291 | -0.58% | ⚠️ Mild Yen Strength |
| USD/AUD | 1.4167 | -0.50% | ✅ AUD Strength |
| USD/CAD | 1.3677 | -0.34% | ✅ CAD Strength |
| USD/GBP | 0.7423 | -0.94% | ✅ GBP Strength |
| USD/MXN | 17.7052 | -1.09% | ✅ MXN Strength |
| DXY (USD Index) | 98.97 | -0.68% | 🔴 USD Weak |
The US Dollar Index breaking below 99.00 at 98.97 is a pivotal technical development that will have ripple effects across asset classes. The DXY at this level represents a multi-month weak point for the dollar, and combined with crude oil’s collapse, creates an unusual dynamic: normally, a weakening dollar provides a floor for oil prices (since oil is dollar-denominated), yet both are declining simultaneously — suggesting the oil move is being driven by genuine demand destruction or supply excess rather than dollar mechanics.
The Mexican peso strengthening 1.09% against the dollar is the most surprising currency move in the table. MXN has historically been a sentiment barometer for EM risk appetite and US trade policy sensitivity — peso strength in this environment suggests that whatever is spooking Asian markets has not yet spread to Latin American risk assets. EUR/USD’s +0.55% move to 1.1639 is consistent with a dollar weakness narrative and may reflect capital repatriation from European investors who had been long US assets.
The yen’s modest 0.58% strengthening to 158.29 USD/JPY is interesting in the context of Japan’s -3.48% equity collapse. In a classic risk-off yen-strength scenario, USD/JPY would be moving far more aggressively downward — the relatively muted move suggests the BOJ’s continued policy normalization path is capping the yen’s safe-haven bid. GBP’s 0.94% strengthening relative to the dollar is the largest among the majors today, suggesting UK-specific flows or broad-based dollar selling.
Section 5 — Options
| Instrument | Price | Change % | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|
| VIX | 23.95 | -10.56% | ⚠️ Elevated but Falling |
| UVIX (2x Long VIX ETF) | $7.89 | -13.96% | ✅ Hedges Unwinding |
| SQQQ (3x NASDAQ Bear) | $75.10 | -6.42% | ✅ Bears Losing |
| TZA (3x Small Cap Bear) | $7.06 | -8.43% | ✅ Bears Losing |
| TQQQ (3x NASDAQ Bull) | $45.91 | +6.56% | ✅ Leverage Bulls Active |
| SOXL (3x Semi Bull) | $56.20 | +9.89% | ✅ Semis Screaming |
The most important signal in the options market today is UVIX falling 13.96% — an emphatic statement that volatility sellers are winning and hedges are being torn off at pace. VIX at 23.95 represents a session where professional options market makers are aggressively repricing downside protection, which is consistent with the equity rally but striking given the magnitude of Asian market losses that might normally sustain elevated VIX premium.
At a VIX of 24, options premium remains elevated — sellers of premium can still collect meaningful theta, but buyers of puts for directional hedging face a steep cost. A move below VIX 20 would signal normalization; a move above 30 would indicate institutional hedging acceleration and likely trigger systematic selling programs. The current 23–24 zone is “worried but not panicking” territory — a zone where active managers tend to selectively reduce hedge loads rather than initiate new protective positions.
The simultaneous collapse of both bear ETF volumes (SQQQ -6.42%, TZA -8.43%) while bull leveraged ETFs surge (TQQQ +6.56%, SOXL +9.89%) indicates a decisive shift in intraday positioning away from defensive postures. For premium sellers, the current VIX level offers attractive entry on short strangle or cash-secured put strategies on names with fundamental support.
Section 6 — Sectors
Note: Yahoo Finance’s dedicated sectors page returned an error today. Sector analysis is derived from representative ETFs in the most-active list.
| ETF | Sector | Price | Change % | Volume | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SOXL | Semiconductors (3x) | $56.20 | +9.89% | 56.6M | ✅ Strong Bull |
| QQQ | Tech/Growth | $594.02 | +2.18% | 26.5M | ✅ Bull |
| IWM | Small Cap | $249.14 | +2.86% | 27.4M | ✅ Bull |
| SPY | Broad Market | $660.88 | +1.90% | 40.4M | ✅ Bull |
| XLF | Financials | $49.61 | +1.60% | 22.6M | ✅ Bull |
| GDX | Gold Miners | $84.49 | +5.46% | 22.2M | ✅ Strong Bull |
| TLT | Long Duration Bonds | $86.51 | +0.82% | 20.8M | ✅ Mild Bull |
| XLE | Energy | $59.69 | +1.29% | 26.9M | ⚠️ Bull (with caveats) |
| SOXS | Semis Bear (3x) | $36.74 | -9.64% | 25.1M | 🔴 Bears Crushed |
| TZA | Small Cap Bear (3x) | $7.06 | -8.43% | 92.1M | 🔴 Bears Crushed |
Semiconductors are the unambiguous sector leader today, with SOXL’s nearly 10% gain implying roughly 3.3% upside in the underlying semiconductor index. NVDA’s +2.82% on 57.8 million shares confirms the sector rotation into tech hardware and aligns with the broader AI infrastructure thesis driving institutional accumulation.
Gold miners via GDX are the second-biggest winner at +5.46%, a somewhat puzzling result given that gold itself is down 1.41%. The divergence typically occurs when equity gold miners are catching up to prior metal price appreciation or when financial buyers prefer the operating leverage of mining equities over physical. The energy sector’s +1.29% in XLE despite crude oil’s 9.18% collapse is another notable divergence — XLE is likely supported by earnings visibility and dividend yield, even as spot oil prices crater. Energy stocks could face significant catch-down pressure if oil weakness persists beyond this session.
Small caps via IWM at +2.86% outperforming the S&P’s +1.90% is a constructive breadth signal — small caps require domestic economic confidence to outperform, and today’s relative strength suggests the market views the Asian turmoil as a regional rather than global demand shock. Financials at +1.60% are consistent with a moderate risk-on session but lag the broader market, with sector rotation still favoring growth over value today.
Section 7 — Prediction Markets
Note: Yahoo Finance’s prediction markets page (powered by Polymarket) did not load today, redirecting to the main markets overview. Commentary is based on current market regime and bond market pricing.
| Macro Event | Est. Probability | Source Basis |
|---|---|---|
| Fed holds rates at May FOMC | ~70% | Bond market positioning |
| Fed cuts 25bps by June 2026 | ~45% | 5-yr yield at 3.95% implies moderate cut expectation |
| US recession by end of 2026 | ~25–30% | Credit spread behavior, yield curve shape |
| Oil above $95 by Q2 2026 | <20% | Brent collapse below $101 today |
| VIX above 30 within 30 days | ~15% | Current VIX trajectory and bear ETF unwinding |
The bond market is the most reliable prediction market available today, and it is pricing a modest but growing probability of Fed easing in the second half of 2026. The 5-year Treasury yield at 3.950% sitting below the 10-year at 4.334% and well below the current upper bound of the Fed funds rate implies that duration buyers believe rates will be lower two-to-five years from now — not dramatically lower, but the directional bias is unmistakably toward easing.
The 30-year yield’s proximity to 5% (currently 4.903%) is the key wildcard for Fed watchers. If a supply-heavy Treasury auction or a surprise inflation print pushes the 30-year through 5%, prediction markets would almost certainly reassign cut probabilities materially lower. At these levels, the bond market is consistent with “one or two cuts by year end” as the central scenario.
The Asian equity carnage today — particularly the KOSPI’s 6.49% single-session loss — will likely flow through into prediction market odds for global recession risk by tomorrow’s open. When Asia’s major manufacturing economies see simultaneous 3–6% equity losses, prediction markets historically reprice US recession odds upward within 48–72 hours, even when US equities are rallying. Energy traders should note that today’s oil collapse effectively eliminates the inflationary commodity shock risk that was constraining Fed dovish pivot bets.
Section 8 — Stocks
| Ticker | Company | Price | Change % | Volume | Avg Vol (3M) | Flag |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NVDA | NVIDIA Corp | $177.82 | +2.82% | 57.8M | 174.9M | 🔴 Below avg vol |
| TSLA | Tesla | $383.51 | +4.23% | 25.0M | 60.8M | ⚠️ Below avg vol |
| PLTR | Palantir | $159.21 | +5.66% | 18.9M | 48.3M | ✅ AI momentum |
| INTC | Intel | $45.35 | +3.37% | 26.0M | 104.9M | ⚠️ Below avg vol |
| AAL | American Airlines | $10.93 | +4.75% | 24.5M | 65.3M | ✅ Crude tailwind |
| RIVN | Rivian | $16.20 | +8.65% | 14.4M | 30.9M | ✅ Above avg vol |
| WULF | TeraWulf | $16.76 | +10.17% | 16.3M | 29.9M | ✅ Bitcoin miner |
| NIO | NIO Inc | $5.78 | +6.54% | 14.5M | 47.6M | ⚠️ China risk |
| APGE | Apogee Therapeutics | $78.09 | +18.25% | 1.5M | 962K | ✅ Catalyst move |
| AXTI | AXT Inc | $63.30 | +16.70% | 5.4M | 8.4M | ✅ Semi materials |
Palantir’s +5.66% on 18.9 million shares is today’s most strategically significant large-cap move, as PLTR at $159 is now tracking its AI-government contract narrative without any specific catalyst — pure momentum and sentiment. At a P/E of 239x, Palantir is priced for decades of compounding, and days like today where it outperforms even NVIDIA remind traders that the AI spending theme is far from exhausted in the market’s collective imagination.
The standout story on the upside is APGE (Apogee Therapeutics) at +18.25% — volume of 1.5 million against a 962K average confirms the catalyst is institutional, not retail-driven. AXT Inc’s +16.70% on semiconductor materials ties directly to the sector’s broader strength today; AXT makes compound semiconductors for 5G and photonics, suggesting tight supply conditions in specialty materials.
American Airlines at +4.75% is the most straightforward thematic trade of the session: crude oil down 9% is an airline’s best friend, and AAL’s move is mechanically rational. Watch the entire airline group (UAL was trending at +4.72%) for continued momentum if crude stabilizes below $90. The stock to watch into Tuesday is PLTR: if it consolidates above $155, the bullish momentum structure remains intact; a close back below $150 would signal a false breakout.
Section 9 — Crypto
| Asset | Price | Change % | Market Cap | 52-Wk Change | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bitcoin (BTC) | $71,336.78 | +3.63% | $1.427T | -21.47% | ✅ Bull |
| Ethereum (ETH) | $2,174.19 | +4.48% | $262.4B | -0.04% | ✅ Bull |
| Solana (SOL) | $91.48 | +4.62% | $52.3B | -37.91% | ✅ Bull |
| BNB | $646.25 | +2.42% | $88.1B | -1.02% | ✅ Bull |
| XRP | $1.45 | +3.25% | $88.7B | -42.55% | ✅ Bull |
| DOGE | $0.09 | +2.68% | $14.4B | -50.12% | ⚠️ Lagging |
| Tether (USDT) | $1.00 | -0.01% | $184.2B | — | ✅ Stable |
| Hyperliquid (HYPE) | $38.69 | +0.79% | $9.9B | +134.51% | ⚠️ Slowing |
Bitcoin’s +3.63% move to $71,336 is reclaiming the $70K psychological level with conviction, and its correlation to today’s risk-on US equity session is near-perfect — this is crypto behaving exactly as a high-beta risk asset, amplifying the S&P’s 2% move into a 3.6% daily gain. The 52-week data tells the more sobering story: BTC is still -21.47% from its peak, meaning institutional buyers who entered near the highs remain underwater.
Ethereum’s +4.48% outperformance relative to BTC narrows the ETH/BTC ratio slightly, which is mildly constructive for altcoins. Solana at +4.62% is the strongest among the majors and remains the preferred play for DeFi and NFT activity — its 37.91% 52-week decline creates a significantly discounted entry relative to BTC’s cycle. XRP’s +3.25% is notable given its -42.55% 52-week performance; regulatory clarity continues to attract institutional interest.
The stablecoin complex — Tether’s $184 billion market cap alongside USDC’s $78.8 billion — represents a combined $262 billion sitting in cash-equivalent crypto positions. This $262 billion stablecoin pool is the most important figure in crypto today: it represents dry powder that can accelerate any BTC rally if it begins deploying into risk assets. BTC’s key support level to watch is $68,000. Given today’s equity risk appetite, a test of $73–75K on BTC is the near-term bull case.
Section 10 — Private Companies
Note: Yahoo Finance’s Private Companies section (data by Forge Global and EquityZen) did not render quantitative data in today’s page load.
| Category | Observation | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| AI Infrastructure | Public AI comps surging — private marks re-rating upward | ✅ Bull |
| Energy Tech / Clean Energy | Solar pressure via SEDG -7%; headwinds building | 🔴 Bear |
| Crypto-adjacent private cos | BTC +3.6% supports sentiment and secondary market bids | ✅ Bull |
| Consumer / Retail private cos | Oil collapse a tailwind for consumer spending power | ✅ Mild Bull |
| Asia-exposed private cos | KOSPI -6.5%, Nikkei -3.5% repricing regional risk | 🔴 Bear |
The most important private market implication from today’s public market action is the AI infrastructure repricing thesis. With SOXL gaining nearly 10% and Palantir adding 5.66%, the public AI stack is being bid aggressively — and private AI infrastructure companies (data center operators, GPU cloud providers, AI model companies seeking their next funding round) will see mark-to-market tailwinds in secondary markets. When public AI comps are trading at 239x earnings and the semi sector is rallying 3%+ in underlying, venture marks in the AI space face no downward pressure.
The VIX environment at 23.95 is historically unfavorable for IPO activity — underwriters generally prefer sub-20 VIX conditions for new issuance. With VIX elevated but declining, we are at the early stages of a window that could open for IPO activity if the current relief rally sustains into April. The most at-risk private company sector based on today’s data is anything energy-adjacent: the crude oil collapse puts pressure on oil-and-gas private equity marks, and SEDG’s -7% decline in solar suggests even clean energy companies face a tougher repricing environment.
Section 11 — ETFs
| Ticker | Name | Price | Change % | Volume | 52-Wk Chg | Signal |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TZA | Direxion Small Cap Bear 3X | $7.06 | -8.43% | 92.1M | -48.91% | 🔴 Bears Liquidating |
| TQQQ | ProShares UltraPro QQQ | $45.91 | +6.56% | 64.1M | +30.29% | ✅ Bull |
| TSLL | Direxion Daily TSLA Bull 2X | $13.15 | +8.46% | 60.2M | +8.60% | ✅ Bull |
| SOXL | Direxion Semiconductor Bull 3X | $56.20 | +9.89% | 56.6M | +143.52% | ✅ Strong Bull |
| UVIX | 2x Long VIX Futures ETF | $7.89 | -13.96% | 43.8M | -68.60% | 🔴 Hedges Off |
| SPY | SPDR S&P 500 ETF | $660.88 | +1.90% | 40.4M | +12.98% | ✅ Bull |
| SCO | ProShares UltraShort Crude Oil | $8.73 | +10.03% | 36.9M | -54.81% | 🔴 Oil Crash Trade |
| USO | United States Oil Fund | $111.37 | -8.28% | 34.8M | +62.17% | 🔴 Bear |
| SLV | iShares Silver Trust | $63.61 | +3.40% | 32.5M | +105.34% | ✅ Bull |
| SQQQ | ProShares UltraPro Short QQQ | $75.10 | -6.42% | 31.6M | -52.97% | 🔴 Bears Losing |
| IWM | iShares Russell 2000 | $249.14 | +2.86% | 27.4M | +15.97% | ✅ Bull |
| GDX | VanEck Gold Miners ETF | $84.49 | +5.46% | 22.2M | +81.06% | ✅ Strong Bull |
| TLT | iShares 20+ Yr Treasury Bond | $86.51 | +0.82% | 20.8M | -4.39% | ✅ Mild Bull |
| XLF | Financial Select Sector SPDR | $49.61 | +1.60% | 22.6M | -2.13% | ✅ Bull |
| XLE | Energy Select Sector SPDR | $59.69 | +1.29% | 26.9M | +27.75% | ⚠️ Caution |
| QQQ | Invesco QQQ Trust | $594.02 | +2.18% | 26.5M | +18.63% | ✅ Bull |
The most revealing ETF flow of the morning is TZA’s 92.1 million shares — by far the highest volume ETF today — falling 8.43%. TZA is the Direxion Daily Small Cap Bear 3X ETF, and its extraordinary volume paired with a sharp loss means that bearish small-cap hedges are being aggressively unwound. This is institutional covering, not retail panic selling, and it is the strongest signal in today’s entire ETF table that professional money was positioned defensively and is now rapidly repositioning for upside.
The complementary SCO (ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil) gaining 10.03% on 36.9 million shares tells us that oil bears are being rewarded and actively adding to those positions. UVIX crashing 13.96% on 43.8 million shares is the volatility hedge purge that always accompanies risk rallies of this magnitude. For Monday’s session, the actionable ETF positioning is: long SOXL (semiconductors), long GDX (gold miners as equity play), long TQQQ for tactical tech momentum, and short USO/long SCO if crude stays below $90. TLT at $86.51 offers a defensive allocation with yield support if the rally fades.
Section 12 — Mutual Funds
Note: Yahoo Finance’s Mutual Funds section did not load specific fund-level data today. Category analysis is constructed from representative ETF performance across asset classes.
| Fund Category | Proxy ETF/Index | Est. Return Today | YTD Signal | Action Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Large Cap Growth | QQQ / TQQQ | +2.1% to +2.3% | ⚠️ YTD negative | Accumulate on dips |
| Large Cap Value | XLF / SPY blend | +1.6% to +1.9% | ⚠️ YTD negative | Neutral |
| Semiconductor / Technology | SOXL underlying | +3.0% to +3.5% | ✅ YTD strong | Overweight |
| Energy | XLE blend | +1.0% to +1.5% | ✅ YTD positive | Trim on crude weakness |
| International Developed | EFA / DAX blend | +1.5% to +2.5% | ✅ YTD positive | Neutral |
| Emerging Markets | EEM / Asia blend | -2% to -4% | 🔴 YTD negative | Underweight |
| Long-Term Bond | TLT / PIMCO | +0.7% to +0.9% | ⚠️ Flat to negative | Defensive allocation |
| Money Market | 13-Wk T-Bill proxy | ~3.62% annualized | ✅ Steady | Tactical cash reserve |
The money market fund category remains one of the most compelling risk-adjusted allocations in the current regime. With the 13-week T-bill yielding 3.62% annualized, money market funds continue to offer meaningful real returns with zero duration risk. The estimated $6+ trillion sitting in money market funds industry-wide represents the ultimate dry powder — any sustained VIX decline toward 18–20 could catalyze a significant rotation from money market to equities, amplifying any bull move in US stocks.
Active large-cap growth managers are likely showing their best relative performance of the month today, given the QQQ’s 2.18% and Palantir/semiconductor strength. However, YTD context matters: QQQ is showing -5.25% YTD and SPY is -4.63% YTD, meaning that most large-cap growth funds remain in the red for 2026 despite today’s session. Active managers in this category face redemption pressure if April does not sustain the momentum.
The most at-risk mutual fund category from today’s global action is emerging market funds, where the KOSPI -6.49%, Hang Seng -3.54%, and SENSEX -2.46% represent real NAV damage. Retail investors who own EM funds will likely see the headline loss and face the behavioral temptation to redeem — which historically accelerates downward pressure in EM equities. Energy sector mutual funds also face a reckoning if WTI crude sustains below $90 — the XLE’s +1.29% today masks what is likely a more severe underlying commodity pressure that will flow into earnings revisions in Q2.
Data sourced from Yahoo Finance as of approximately 7:00 AM PT, Monday, March 23, 2026. Market prices are real-time and subject to intraday movement. This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Sectors page returned a data error; prediction markets page did not load independently. Mutual fund category data is estimated from representative ETF performance; direct fund NAVs not available via today’s feed.