The Lyceum: Macro & Markets Daily — Mar 31, 2026
Photo: lyceumnews.com
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
The Big Picture
March went out the way it came in — ugly. The S&P 500 closed down about 0.4% on the session to finish its worst month since 2022, leaving it more than 3% lower year-to-date. The Nasdaq remained in correction territory, down more than 10% from its all-time high, while the Russell 2000 rose 3.4% to close at 2,496.37 on quarter-end positioning. The 10-year Treasury yield traded near 4.33% on the session, down from last week's 4.44% spike. Brent crude settled near $112 after touching $116 intraday, capping a roughly 55% surge in March that has no modern precedent. Dow figures weren't cleanly confirmed at press time but tracked the S&P's weakness. The theme: everyone is repositioning amid a world where oil stays in triple digits, the Fed is unlikely to cut soon, and the next data prints — payrolls Friday, ISM tomorrow — will help determine whether "stagflation" stays a worry or becomes a diagnosis.
Today's Stories
S&P 500 logs worst month since 2022 as quarter-end brings no relief
What happened. The S&P 500 closed down about 0.4% on the session, finishing March with five consecutive weekly losses and a drawdown that makes it the index's worst month since the 2022 rate-shock selloff. Breadth was mixed — roughly 54% of issues declined — while the Nasdaq Composite stayed lodged in correction territory, more than 10% off its all-time high, as AI and growth names continued their mechanical de-rating. Underneath the headline, the Russell 2000 rose 3.4% to 2,496.37, its best session in weeks, as beaten-down domestic small caps caught a quarter-end bid amid hints of de-escalation in the Gulf.
What changes. If the small-cap bounce holds into April, it would signal the start of a genuine rotation away from mega-cap concentration — the kind of broadening bulls have begged for all year. Managers who spent March marking down risk-heavy names would have cover to rebuild positions in domestically oriented cyclicals, especially if oil stabilizes and the yield curve stops steepening. The losers in that scenario are the crowded long-duration tech trades that defined the first two months of the year.
What to watch for failure. If the Russell gives back today's gains within the first two sessions of April and high-yield spreads keep leaking wider, this was just window-dressing before books closed — not a regime change. The signal: watch whether small-cap volume stays elevated or collapses back to March's anemic levels.
Oil holds north of $110 as Hormuz crisis drags on
What happened. Brent crude settled around $112 after an intraday spike to $116, then pulled back as some desks pointed to positioning fatigue and demand-destruction bets. The Strait of Hormuz — which normally carries about 20% of global seaborne oil — remains severely disrupted, and even the IEA's emergency release of 400 million barrels hasn't closed the gap. In March, roughly a 55% surge was a record for the Brent contract, surpassing even the Gulf War. Oil's term structure has flipped to mild contango, suggesting traders expect some demand destruction ahead rather than an endless supply squeeze.
What changes. As long as crude sits above $100, central banks face a tradeoff between fighting inflation and avoiding recession. U.S. gasoline prices are above $4 a gallon, import prices posted their largest monthly jump in four years in March, and every refining and shipping contract locked at late-March prices will keep realized Q2 inflation elevated even if spot prices ease. Former President Trump's public comments telling European allies to "go get your own oil" have added to concerns about the coalition response, which could delay operational de‑escalation and mean the supply disruption outlasts the diplomatic timeline markets are pricing.
What to watch for failure. If Brent breaks cleanly below $100 on a credible ceasefire or restored tanker transit, the stagflation narrative would weaken and long-duration assets could rally. The tell: watch API crude inventories tomorrow at 4:30pm ET — if U.S. stockpiles are finally building, the "demand destruction" thesis gains credibility over the "spiral higher" scenario.
Consumer confidence edges up — but households are bracing for inflation
What happened. The Conference Board's Consumer Confidence Index ticked up to 91.8 in March from 91.0 in February, beating expectations for a small decline. But the details tell a different story: the Present Situation component jumped 4.6 points to 123.3, while the Expectations Index — households' six-month outlook on income, business, and labor — slid to 70.9, a level that has historically preceded recessions. Twelve-month inflation expectations surged to their highest since August 2025, with survey respondents citing oil, gas, and the war in qualitative responses.
What changes. For the Fed, this is a genuine bind. Resilient current confidence means consumption may hold up near-term, which keeps the economy out of freefall. But if households start believing higher inflation is permanent, cutting rates later this year becomes politically and economically radioactive — and the window for a soft landing narrows. Discretionary and big-ticket spending (autos, housing-adjacent retail, travel) are the sectors most exposed to an expectations-driven pullback.
What to watch for failure. If the Expectations Index stabilizes above 80 in April's read and inflation expectations retreat, the Fed gets breathing room. If it drops further toward 65, you're looking at a consumer who's already mentally in recession — and actual spending data will likely follow within a quarter. Watch Atlanta Fed GDPNow updates Thursday for early Q2 confirmation.
⚡ What Most People Missed
- Farmers are hedging geopolitics at the seed level. USDA's Prospective Plantings report showed U.S. corn acres falling 3% to 95.3 million while soybean intentions jumped — the first major acreage shift since fertilizer costs exploded with the war. With urea near $700/ton in late March, farmers are swapping nitrogen‑hungry corn for soybeans. Track weekly export sales Wednesdays for confirmation the pivot has market bite.
- The dollar's strength is a war premium, not a growth signal. DXY had its best month since July 2025 before easing about 0.57% to roughly 99.9 on the session, with EUR/USD dipping to 1.14. Some technical analysts are warning of a possible "double top" — meaning the safe-haven bid under emerging-market carry trades could unwind quickly if tensions ease.
- The credit plumbing is starting to rattle. S&P Global downgraded a CLO tranche (Dryden 43) and DBRS Morningstar cut several classes of a CMBS trust, citing weakening overcollateralization buffers. These aren't headline moves, but downgrades in structured credit are early warning lights that elevated rates are eroding the protective cushions in leveraged corporate and commercial real estate structures.
- Risk-off rotation is now systematic, not just sentimental. Michael Gayed's Beta Rotation model has stayed in risk-off mode for a fifth straight week as utilities outperform the S&P 500. Five consecutive weeks is no longer a one-off — the factor machines are confirming what the headlines hint at: quiet de‑risking before it shows up in the front‑page indexes.
- Japan's Nikkei is on pace for its worst month in years, down roughly 11% in March on the month as the same tech-and-oil crosscurrents batter Asia — an important global risk‑sentiment tell that doesn't show up if you only watch U.S. screens.
📅 What to Watch
- Wednesday 8:15am ET — ADP private payrolls: If March prints materially above the ~170k consensus, it strengthens the Fed's case to stay hawkish into the oil shock and makes Friday's official jobs report a potential volatility event rather than a confirmation.
- Wednesday 10:00am ET — ISM Manufacturing PMI (prior 52.4): A drop back toward 50 would be the first hard evidence that the energy shock is cooling the real economy, not just sentiment — and would force a repricing of the Kansas City Fed's sanguine 2% Q1 growth call.
- Wednesday 4:30pm ET — API crude inventories: If U.S. stockpiles are finally building, the "demand destruction" thesis gains legs and Brent's path back below $100 becomes tradeable — which would immediately ease the stagflation math compressing equity multiples.
- Friday 8:30am ET — March nonfarm payrolls (to be released on Friday, a market holiday): A strong print with firm wage growth would push rate-hike odds higher when markets reopen Monday — a highly adverse setup for long-duration assets entering a closed weekend.
- Any credible update on Strait of Hormuz transit: If tankers can reliably transit before early‑April escalation risks, Brent dropping back toward triple digits would rewrite the Q2 playbook overnight.
The Closer
Small caps ripping 3.4% while the Nasdaq stays in correction, like the JV team celebrating while the varsity bus breaks down on the highway. Farmers quietly swapping corn for soybeans because fertilizer costs more than the crop. A bond market that round-tripped 12 basis points intraday and ended exactly where it started, exhausted by its own indecision.
Somewhere a CLO tranche just got downgraded and nobody noticed — which is, historically, exactly when you should notice.
Eyes open, hedges on. —Lyceum
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