Top 5 Things That Moved Markets This Past Week
What will next week bring?
What will next week bring?

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Investing.com – Top 5 things that rocked U.S. markets this week

1. First-Quarter Earnings Season Begins on Sour Note

The start of earnings season in earnest on Friday did not go according to plan as an earnings beat by major Wall Street banks failed to induce a stock market rally.

JPMorgan Chase & Co (NYSE:JPM), Citigroup Inc (NYSE:C), Wells Fargo & Company (NYSE:WFC) posted above street consensus first-quarter earnings Friday but fell more than 1%, dragging the broader market lower.

Wells Fargo was the biggest decliner among the trio, falling more than 3%, as the lender warned it may significantly change its first quarter results amid a looming regulatory settlement that could set the bank back by as much as $1 billion.

Geopolitical tensions and trade-war fears were a constant threat to risk appetite as equities ebbed and flowed to tweets from President Trump on Syria. While a WSJ report Friday, suggesting the White House would continue its aggressive stance on trade and threaten to block Chinese technology investment in the United States weighed on risk appetite.

Facebook (NASDAQ:FB) was also in the spotlight this week as CEO Mark Zuckerberg made the rounds on Capitol Hill, testifying in a two-day congressional hearing.

Zuckerberg didn’t fluff his lines, much to the delight of Facebook shareholders, as the social media giant’s shares snapped a four-week losing streak to close up nearly 5% for the week.

The S&P 500 index closed about 2.0% higher for the week.

2. Crude Oil: Traders Up Bets on ‘Fear Premium’

Crude oil prices ended the week at three-year highs after rallying for five-straight days as concerns about rising U.S. oil output and supplies took a backseat amid geopolitical tensions.

The oil price rally this week was supported by expectations that producers in the Middle East, could suffer supply disruptions in the wake of rising geopolitical tensions, adding a “fear premium” to oil prices, according to RBC.

Sentiment on oil was also bolstered by a trio of reports from the Energy Information Administration, OPEC, and the International Energy Agency confirming that OPEC cuts continued to lower global supplies, which are predicted to reach the five-year average levels later this year.

Total OPEC production fell to the lowest since March 2017, according to a monthly report from OPEC.

On Friday U.S. crude futures gained 0.48% to settle at $67.39 a barrel on Friday, and notched a 8.6% gain for the week.

3. Dollar Slips as Fed Minutes Fail to Boost Appetite

The dollar struggled to find its footing this week after forays higher were met with resistance as geopolitical tensions weighed, while a strong rally in sterling also kept a lid on upward momentum.