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Federal ReserveFederal Reserve Board issues enforcement actions with former employee of Equity Bank and former employee of First State Bank of DongolaBloomberg MarketsPeyton Manning-Backed Women’s Soccer Team Sells Private DebtBloomberg MarketsUS Consumer Spending Stalls, GDP Takes a HitBloomberg MarketsDanish Drugmaker Leo Pharma Is Said to Seek Bank Pitches for IPOBloomberg MarketsVenture Global Greenlights $8.6 Billion US LNG Export ExpansionBloomberg MarketsEU Floats Fix for Euro Use That’s Clouding Montenegro MembershipFinancial TimesUS economy ended 2025 on weaker footing than previously thoughtBloomberg MarketsWhat War in Iran Means for Teapot Oil Refineries in ChinaBloomberg MarketsFrom Amazon to Airbnb, US Blue-Chip Bond Sales Flirt With RecordBloomberg MarketsBurgers, Memes and CEOs: The Fast-Food War Goes ViralBloomberg MarketsHims Shares Set for Record Week as New Novo Pact Fuels OptimismBloomberg MarketsJudge Blocks MFS CEO’s Pick to Oversee Unit of Failed LenderBloomberg MarketsWhat Strait of Hormuz Disruptions Mean to Global ShippingBloomberg MarketsUS Stocks Rise as Tepid Economic Data Boosts Rate-Cut HopesBloomberg MarketsBlackRock’s $220 Billion Model Machine Stays Bullish on StocksFederal ReserveFederal Reserve Board issues enforcement actions with former employee of Equity Bank and former employee of First State Bank of DongolaBloomberg MarketsPeyton Manning-Backed Women’s Soccer Team Sells Private DebtBloomberg MarketsUS Consumer Spending Stalls, GDP Takes a HitBloomberg MarketsDanish Drugmaker Leo Pharma Is Said to Seek Bank Pitches for IPOBloomberg MarketsVenture Global Greenlights $8.6 Billion US LNG Export ExpansionBloomberg MarketsEU Floats Fix for Euro Use That’s Clouding Montenegro MembershipFinancial TimesUS economy ended 2025 on weaker footing than previously thoughtBloomberg MarketsWhat War in Iran Means for Teapot Oil Refineries in ChinaBloomberg MarketsFrom Amazon to Airbnb, US Blue-Chip Bond Sales Flirt With RecordBloomberg MarketsBurgers, Memes and CEOs: The Fast-Food War Goes ViralBloomberg MarketsHims Shares Set for Record Week as New Novo Pact Fuels OptimismBloomberg MarketsJudge Blocks MFS CEO’s Pick to Oversee Unit of Failed LenderBloomberg MarketsWhat Strait of Hormuz Disruptions Mean to Global ShippingBloomberg MarketsUS Stocks Rise as Tepid Economic Data Boosts Rate-Cut HopesBloomberg MarketsBlackRock’s $220 Billion Model Machine Stays Bullish on Stocks
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CNBC Top Newsmarkets

The Iran conflict and $100 oil hasn't scared off the small investor — yet

CNBC Top News
Friday, March 13, 2026 at 2:37 PM
~4 min read
TradeEquitiesEnergy

Original Report

Retail traders can’t stop buying stocks.

Glass House Analysis

International economic policy has concrete impacts far beyond diplomatic circles. Tariffs show up in the price of goods at stores, supply chain disruptions affect whether products are on shelves, and trade tensions can mean job losses in export-dependent industries. The globalized economy means that decisions made abroad can affect workers and consumers domestically.

The implications extend beyond the immediate news cycle. Every economic development creates ripples that affect employment, prices, and opportunities in ways that may not be immediately visible but are deeply felt. By tracking these connections, we can better understand how the economy truly works—not as an abstract machine, but as a human system shaped by and shaping the lives of millions.

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