Dow Jones today: DJIA rebounds 300 points as Amazon and Nvidia lead; Fed Beige Book next

March 4, 2026
Dow Jones today: DJIA rebounds 300 points as Amazon and Nvidia lead; Fed Beige Book next

New York, March 4, 2026, 12:33 (ET) — Regular session.

  • Dow edges higher, lifted by a tech bounce and as oil prices level off from their recent peak.
  • Headlines out of the Middle East are pushing inflation worries—and the timing of rate cuts—right back into the spotlight.
  • Eyes turn to the Fed’s Beige Book release later Wednesday, with the U.S. jobs report coming up Friday.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 324.35 points, or 0.67%, reaching 48,824.77 as of 11:53 a.m. ET Wednesday. Amazon.com and Nvidia both gained after news broke about secret Iranian overtures to the U.S., plus actions from President Donald Trump to stabilize oil prices. “Until people think what’s happening in the Middle East will cause a recession, they’re giving stocks the benefit of the doubt,” said Chris Zaccarelli, chief investment officer at Northlight Asset Management. The S&P 500 added 0.88%, while the Nasdaq jumped 1.45%. Reuters

The rebound carries weight because Tuesday’s sharp drop was sparked by the very issue still dogging traders: whether the Middle East conflict could push up energy prices enough to fan inflation again. The Dow slid 403.51 points, or 0.83%, that day. “There seems to be some notion” this war might “persist longer” and start to “impact energy infrastructure,” said Chuck Carlson, chief executive at Horizon Investment Services. Reuters

Oil’s been swinging sharply, though prices took a breather: Brent slipped 0.3% to $81.13 a barrel, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate edged down 0.4% to $74.30 as of 11:18 a.m. ET. According to Reuters, for a fifth straight day, traffic through the Strait of Hormuz remains at a standstill. Giovanni Staunovo at UBS noted traders “seem to expect a de-escalation,” but flagged the risk of deeper output cuts if the gridlock continues. Reuters

New numbers out of the U.S. as well. ADP reported private payrolls jumped by 63,000 in February—strongest since July 2025—but January’s figure was trimmed to an 11,000 gain. Most of those new jobs showed up in education, health, and construction. The Fed, for its part, kept its benchmark overnight rate steady at 3.50%-3.75% in January. According to the report, traders have pulled back on expectations for a June rate cut following the recent energy-price shock.

Growth signals from the services sector looked different. The Institute for Supply Management’s Services PMI landed at 56.1 in February, marking expansion territory. Business activity scored 59.9, and new orders reached 58.6. Its employment index edged higher to 51.8.

Economists are debating whether robust demand will eventually get squeezed by rising costs. Wells Fargo figures that if oil sticks 10% higher, headline inflation could climb by about 0.3 percentage point in both the second and third quarter. Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs sees a $10 bump in crude taking roughly 0.1 percentage point off GDP growth for 2026 if elevated prices persist. The ISM survey came out before the latest flare-up, but it did single out the war as a potential drag on the outlook.

Because the Dow is price-weighted, higher-priced stocks can yank the index’s number up or down in a hurry. It sometimes leaves sessions appearing tidier than what’s really happening underneath.

The oil tail-risk hasn’t budged. UBS bumped up its Brent outlook for both the first quarter and for 2026, warning that fresh hits to regional energy infrastructure could shove Brent above $90 a barrel. Close the Strait of Hormuz for any length of time, and prices could easily break $100.

Traders are watching for the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book at 2:00 p.m. ET—a district-by-district readout that helps them assess wage and price pressures.

The government’s February jobs data drops at 8:30 a.m. ET Friday—rate-cut wagers face a key hurdle after days ruled by oil headlines and war jitters.

Technology News Today

  • ANBERNIC RG35XX H retro handheld offers instant play with over 5,500 games for under €70
    April 18, 2026, 11:14 AM EDT. The ANBERNIC RG35XX H, a 3.5-inch IPS handheld, runs Linux and ships with more than 5,500 classic games ready to play. Available on AliExpress during the Spring Breeze sale for under €70, the device promises instant access without downloads or updates, and no accounts are required. The 3.5-inch IPS screen offers solid visibility and balanced colors, while the Linux-based system emphasizes stability and speed, keeping the focus on playing. The Recommender highlights three pillars: immediate game access, reliable performance, and portability. ANBERNIC has built a reputation in portable retro consoles with positive reviews for ease of use. In short, you can open and play without barriers or waiting.