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Plus, Micron is having a moment.

Good afternoon. Or, for any bots reading this, 01001000 01100101 01101100 01101100 01101111.

A week ago, Cloudflare CEO Matthew Prince told a crowd at SXSW in Austin, Texas that online traffic from bots and AI will exceed human traffic by 2027. But a new report from cybersecurity firm Human Security says we’re ahead of schedule, and that “automated traffic” on the internet grew eight times faster than flesh and blood users, surpassing human traffic.

We would like to extend a warm welcome our new robot readers, and please don’t take offense at any negative coverage of the AI trade.

Lucy Brewster, Sissy Yan & Mark Reeth

MARKETS

Nasdaq

21,408.08

S&P

6,477.16

Dow

45,960.11

10-Year

4.416%

Gold

$4,358.20

Oil

$94.16

Data is provided by

*Stock data as of market close. Here's what these numbers mean.

  • Stocks: President Trump’s deadline to negotiate a ceasefire with Iran arrives tomorrow, and equities sank slowly but surely all day as doubts about peace in the Middle East crept in. The Nasdaq was dragged into correction territory, down 10% from its record high on October 29, as tech stocks sold off.
  • Commodities: Gold has tumbled 16.88% since fighting in Iran began as the likelihood of interest-rate cuts faded, and 95% of gold-mining stocks are now in a bear market—which some analysts say is a contrarian buying opportunity.
  • Bonds: Weak demand for the Treasury’s $44 billion 7-year note auction today capped off a terrible week for bonds.
 

MACRO

A man with his head in his hands in front of trading screens at the New York Stock Exchange during morning trading on March 25, 2026 in New York City

Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images

Should we start with the bad news, or the other bad news?

We’re finally getting a fuller picture of how the broader economy is faring amid the war with Iran, AI fears, and a slowing labor market…and it’s not a pretty one.

Today, the Organization for Economic Coordination and Development said in its latest outlook that not only is the war with Iran kneecapping global economic growth, it’s also reviving inflation. The OECD upped its forecast for the average headline inflation rate of the G20 economies in 2026 to 4%, higher than its prior projection of 2.8% back in December. The US-specific forecast was even bleaker: Domestic headline inflation will reach 4.2% this year, up 1.2% from the last forecast.

While the organization’s projected global growth rate for 2026 is still 2.9%, the same as its December projection, it’s a slowdown from the 3.3% growth rate in 2025. The OECD also predicted US economic growth will slow to 1.7% in 2027, down from the 1.9% it forecast in December.

“The breadth and duration of the conflict are very uncertain, but a prolonged period of higher energy prices will add markedly to business costs and raise consumer price inflation, with adverse consequences for growth,” the Paris-based organization said in the report. However, it also expects most of the inflationary pressure to recede by the end of 2027.

It’s probably no coincidence that, at the same time, major Wall Street banks are recalibrating their recession odds:

  • Goldman Sachs just raised its recession probability within the next year to 30%
  • Meanwhile, EY Parthenon upped its odds to 40%
  • Wilmington Trust says there’s a 45% chance
  • Moody’s Analytics raised its own outlook to 48.6%

“The magnitude and duration of flow disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz and the risk of growing damage to oil production, refining capacity, LNG fields, and liquefaction infrastructure suggest a more persistent inflationary impulse, extending beyond a short-lived energy price spike,” explained EY-Parthenon Chief Economist Gregory Daco in a note.

Retailers may tack on a few bucks

Big banks and economists aren’t the only ones rethinking their approach.

Retailers like H&M are considering increasing their prices if the Iran war continues to be protracted. British retailer Next blamed more expensive transportation due to the oil shock, arguing that higher freight and energy prices will cost the company about $20 million in the near term, which may eventually be passed on to consumers.

Time to get your summer wardrobe together ASAP.—LB

Presented By VanEck

STOCKS

The biggest winners and losers on the stock market today

            

🟢 What’s up

  • Olaplex surged 51.13% after Germany’s Henkel agreed to acquire the beauty company in a $1.4 billion deal.
  • Jack Daniel’s maker Brown-Forman climbed 9.75% on reports Pernod Ricard is exploring a potential takeover.
  • Best Buy gained 4.65% amid speculation GameStop could acquire the big box retailer.
  • Travel agency Navan jumped 43.28% following strong earnings and upbeat 2027 revenue guidance.
  • Kodiak Sciences soared 74.77% after the biotech company revealed strong trial results for its diabetic retinopathy treatment.
  • Avis Budget Group popped 12.97% and Hertz Global gained 9.15% as disgruntled customers are canceling their flights and just renting a car to travel instead.

What’s down

  • Meta Platforms fell 7.92% and Alphabet sank 3.06% after the Mag 7 giants lost some major legal cases this week.
  • AppLovin dropped 10.41% as weakening e-commerce spending and client churn weighed on growth.
  • Pony AI declined 14.66% with revenue down 18% year over year, reflecting mixed quarterly results.
  • Snap slid 10.69% after the EU opened an investigation into child safety and illegal activity on the platform.
  • Furniture maker MillerKnoll sank 22.37% after issuing a weak outlook tied to fuel costs and Middle East shipping challenges.
  • Worthington Steel fell 14.91% despite solid revenue growth, as margins came under pressure from tariffs and macro headwinds.
  • Microsoft fell 1.37% as UBS cut its price target on weak 365 Copilot adoption, putting shares on pace for their worst six-month stretch since 2009.

STAT OF THE DAY

The Wall Street bull surrounded by money

Illustration: Anna Kim, Photos: Getty Images

Wall Street bankers can finally afford that third Patek Philippe watch they’ve been eyeing.

The New York State Comptroller—aka, the guy in charge of money in New York—revealed today that the total pool for Wall Street bonus payouts climbed to $49.2 billion last year, its highest level since 1987. That means the average annual bonus for a Wall Streeter rose to $246,600, a 6% increase (up about $15,000) from 2024.

Clearly, it was a very good year for your college buddy who now wears nothing but a Patagonia vest and deal sleds. Bankers benefitted from a surge in mergers and acquisitions, as well as record trading revenue as investors sought to profit from market volatility. The six largest banks in the US raked in a combined $593 billion in revenue in 2025, 6% higher than the year before, and in their earnings reports earlier this year all the big banks expressed optimism that this year will be more of the same.

That should lead to even bigger bonuses next year, and honestly we’re happy for Wall Street—they really needed the win.—MR

AI STOCKS

an illustration of the RAM memory shortage

Whatawin/Getty Images

The AI playbook might be getting a rewrite.

On Tuesday, Google introduced TurboQuant, a compression technique the company says can reduce the memory required to run large language models by up to sixfold, significantly improving AI efficiency.

That’s pretty bad news for memory stocks, which had surged on booming AI demand from companies like Google, OpenAI, and Anthropic: Samsung rallied nearly 200% over the past year, while Micron and SK Hynix each climbed more than 300%. But if models require less memory, investors are suddenly worried that demand for high-bandwidth chips could soften.

That has sent these once high-flying stocks tumbling over the last five days: SanDisk dropped 21.73%, Western Digital fell 11.95%, SK Hynix declined 8.80%, and Samsung slid 10.84%.

Micron in focus

Micron, in many ways the poster child for the memory stock boom, has also been making headlines. The company recently posted blowout earnings, with sales surging 196% year over year, adjusted EPS jumping 682%, and margins expanding from 36.8% a year ago to 75%. But the stock still sold off last week, and shares fell another 6.94% this afternoon.

One of the key reasons for the decline is that investors are worried the traditionally cyclical memory market is nearing a peak, prompting profit-taking as pricing power and margins reach elevated levels. Another is the supply-demand imbalance: surging demand has outpaced supply, pushing Micron to ramp capex to $25 billion in FY2026, well above expectations, and raising fears of future oversupply.

A new playbook

From today’s market reaction, it’s clear that investors are feeling jittery about the memory industry. But analysts have a different view—in fact, while Micron has sunk 19.50% over the last week, it saw near-unanimous price target upgrades following its latest earnings report.

Wall Street says this time is different. In addition to a structural shift in demand driven by AI that is more durable, they say the industry is no longer purely cyclical, where supply inevitably floods the market. Cantor Fitzgerald’s CJ Muse went even further, saying undersupply could worsen into 2027, with earnings power continuing to rise.

As for concerns that Google’s breakthrough could reduce memory demand, analysts say making AI cheaper and more efficient could drive broader adoption, ultimately increasing total demand for memory chips. Morgan Stanley analyst Joseph Moore pointed out that Google’s improvements won’t significantly reduce the need for memory chips, since the underlying hardware still requires a fixed amount of memory.

So, while it’s easy to trade on headlines, it might be worth digging deeper—and listening to what the pros are saying.—SY

Together With VanEck

NEWS

Around the market

              

CALENDAR

What is happening in the world of finance tomorrow

         

Economic reports: The preliminary consumer sentiment reading this month was conducted before the war in Iran began. Tomorrow’s final reading for March will include the entire month, and the war in its entirety, so expect a lot less optimism.

Earnings announcements: Carnival Corp. and TMC The Metals Company

Everything else: Today is opening day of the MLB season, which means that by tomorrow the Mets will be out of playoff contention.

RECS

Reading material

        

This is the single-greatest predictor of stock market returns—and it’s never been more bearish.

There are only 22 non-real-estate stocks in the S&P 500 that have dividend yields above 5%. These are the six worth buying.

After analyzing over 1,700 large employers, these are the best places to work for the perfect mix of starting your career, getting ahead, and thriving.

Economic growth might be slowing, but a deluge of M&A deals are already on their way—and if you time it right, you can make a tidy profit by buying just before a deal is done.

Private credit fund managers wanted retail investors’ money. They’re probably regretting that decision.

Dig deeper into gold: From the makers of the first US gold equity fund, VanEck offers the VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX). Learn why gold miners can offer built-in leverage to a rising gold price.*

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✢ A Note From VanEck

Important Disclosures

This is not an offer to buy or sell, or a recommendation to buy or sell any of the securities, financial instruments or digital assets mentioned herein. The information presented does not involve the rendering of personalized investment, financial, legal, tax advice, or any call to action. Certain statements contained herein may constitute projections, forecasts and other forward-looking statements, which do not reflect actual results, are for illustrative purposes only, are valid as of the date of this communication, and are subject to change without notice. Actual future performance of any assets or industries mentioned are unknown. Information provided by third party sources are believed to be reliable and have not been independently verified for accuracy or completeness and cannot be guaranteed. VanEck does not guarantee the accuracy of third party data. The information herein represents the opinion of the author(s), but not necessarily those of VanEck or its other employees.

An investment in the VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX) may be subject to risks which include, but are not limited to, risks related to investments in gold and silver mining companies, special risk considerations of investing in Canadian, Australian and African issuers, foreign securities, emerging market issuers, foreign currency, depositary receipts, small- and medium-capitalization companies, equity securities, market, operational, index tracking, authorized participant concentration, no guarantee of active trading market, trading issues, passive management, fund shares trading, premium/discount, liquidity of fund shares, non-diversified and index-related concentration risks, all of which may adversely affect the Fund. Emerging market issuers and foreign securities may be subject to securities markets, political and economic, investment and repatriation restrictions, different rules and regulations, less publicly available financial information, foreign currency and exchange rates, operational and settlement, and corporate and securities laws risks. Small- and medium-capitalization companies may be subject to elevated risks.

Investing involves substantial risk and high volatility, including possible loss of principal. An investor should consider the investment objective, risks, charges and expenses of a Fund carefully before investing. To obtain a prospectus and summary prospectus, which contain this and other information, call 800.826.2333 or visit vaneck.com. Please read the prospectus and summary prospectus carefully before investing.

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