### Stock Futures
U.S. index futures are down significantly:
- **S&P 500 futures** (March 2026 contract): Trading around 6,780–6,825, down ~1.0–1.5% (e.g., -63 to -107 points from prior settle).
- **Nasdaq 100 futures**: Off ~1.2–1.3% or more.
- **Dow futures**: Down ~0.9–1.0% (e.g., -428 to -494 points).
**Primary reasons**:
- **Geopolitical escalation and inflation fears** — Intensified U.S./Israeli airstrikes on Iran, combined with Iran's vows of further retaliation and proxy actions (e.g., Hezbollah), have deepened concerns about prolonged conflict. This is stoking worries over sustained energy disruptions (e.g., effective partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz, which handles ~20% of global oil flows).
- **Oil price surge fueling inflation** — Crude (Brent ~$80+, WTI ~$73+) extended gains ~2–4% today after Monday's jump, raising input costs and complicating the Fed's outlook. Traders are scaling back bets on multiple rate cuts in 2026 (e.g., odds of three cuts dropped sharply), with inflation gauges (like ISM manufacturing input prices) surging.
- **Broader risk aversion** — Investors are pricing in higher uncertainty, potential global trade/logistics issues, and economic fallout. Asian/European markets are also weak (e.g., South Korea's Kospi down sharply), amplifying the sell-off.
- **No immediate de-escalation** — Markets are reacting to the lack of cooling signals, with some analysts noting "geopolitical risk is expected to rise" further.
This follows Monday's session where stocks gapped lower but recovered somewhat on dip-buying—today's move suggests renewed caution as the conflict shows no quick resolution.
### Gold Futures
Gold futures (e.g., April 2026 contract) are pulling back modestly after recent surges:
- Spot gold around **$5,290–$5,325/oz** (down ~0.4–0.6% from recent highs, after touching $5,400+ overnight/Monday).
- Futures similarly softer, off from peaks but still elevated overall.

Gold miners are more volatile:

**Reasons for the pullback**:
- **Stronger U.S. dollar** — The dollar index rallied to a five-week high on safe-haven flows and cautious sentiment, pressuring dollar-denominated gold (a firmer USD makes gold more expensive for non-U.S. buyers).

- **Profit-taking after sharp rally** — Gold surged aggressively Monday (up 2–3%+ to one-month highs near $5,400–$5,419) on war-driven safe-haven demand. Today's dip reflects shorter-term traders locking in gains, overbought conditions (e.g., RSI high), and some long liquidation.
- **Abating immediate panic** — Risk aversion eased slightly midday as no new major escalations hit headlines overnight, leading to partial unwinding of positions.
- **Rising Treasury yields** — Yields (e.g., 10-year) jumped to multi-week highs on inflation concerns from oil, reducing gold's appeal vs. yield-bearing assets in the short term.
Despite the pullback, gold remains supported long-term by the war premium, central bank demand, and structural tailwinds (e.g., inflation hedging). Analysts see any dip as potentially short-lived if tensions persist.
The situation is highly fluid—oil flows, new strikes, or diplomatic signals could swing markets quickly.