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TRADING DAY: US stocks rise, dollar falls on hope for Iran war negotiation

Wall Street's major indexes closed sharply higher Monday, as investors hoped for a de-escalation of the Middle East and focused on the first quarter earnings season.

Below, I'll go into greater detail about today's market?moves. Here are some articles that I recommend if you have the time to read. They will help you understand what has happened. Before you continue reading, please sign up for Jamie McGeever’s upcoming LSEG Webinar on April 23 where I will be discussing safe havens during uncertain times with Mike Dolan from ROI.

Today's Key Market Moves: STOCKS: European shares close lower due to the Iran War, while U.S. stock prices rally late in the session on signs of peace negotiations. SECTORS/SHARES : Nine of 11 major sectors of?the S&P500 closed higher with financials and technology stocks leading. FX: Dollar declines for 6th straight session after Strait of Hormuz 'blockade' takes effect. BONDS : Benchmark U.S. Treasury Yields

Today's key Reads

The U.S. Military says that it will block all maritime traffic into and out of?Iran ports

Crude oil returns to $100 per barrel

Peter Magyar, the winner of Hungary's election, promises constitutional changes and renewed EU relations

Goldman Sachs' shares drop on "fixed income weakness" but it beats expectations for a quarter-end profit

Pope Leo says he will continue to speak out against war in the wake of Trump's attack

Today's Talking Points

Are AI disruption fears exaggerated?

S&P 500 Software & Services Index has been hit hard in recent months, with a drop of 23.5% this year. This is due to fears that artificial-intelligence technology could disrupt this group of stocks which includes Oracle and Salesforce, among others.

The index rose 4.6% at the close of Monday.

* Earnings

This week marks the start of the first-quarter earnings season, and it is dominated by big banks.

LSEG data shows that analysts now expect an aggregate growth in S&P 500 earnings of 13.9% year-on-year, down from a previous forecast of 14.4%.

* Inflation/gasoline Prices President Donald Trump warned that prices of gasoline and oil could continue to rise through the midterm elections as a result his decision to attack Iran.

Joanne Hsu of the University of Michigan's Consumer Surveys, in a press release on Friday, cited the soaring gasoline prices as a factor that contributed to the index reaching a new low.

What is likely to move the markets tomorrow? What could move markets tomorrow?

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(source: Reuters)