The S&P 500 opened sharply lower on March 3, 2026, extending a brutal selloff triggered by escalating US-Iran tensions, with the index sliding more than 2% shortlyThe S&P 500 opened sharply lower on March 3, 2026, extending a brutal selloff triggered by escalating US-Iran tensions, with the index sliding more than 2% shortly

S&P 500 Wipes 2026 Gains After Open as Iran War Fears Grip Markets

2026/03/04 01:53
2 min read
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The S&P 500 opened sharply lower on March 3, 2026, extending a brutal selloff triggered by escalating US-Iran tensions, with the index sliding more than 2% shortly after the bell to trade near 6,715, erasing all year-to-date gains and hitting a three-month low.

Futures had already pointed to trouble, dropping 1.62% overnight as reports surfaced of Iran firing on ships attempting to pass the Strait of Hormuz and President Trump warning the conflict could drag on for weeks. By mid-morning, nearly 90% of S&P 500 stocks were red, with decliners outnumbering advancers 17-to-1 at the NYSE.

S&P 500 Wipes 2026 Gains After Open as Iran War Fears Grip Markets

Oil's surge is amplifying the pain. Brent crude topped 80 USD: a 10% jump in days, while WTI climbed past 75 USD on fears that Hormuz disruptions could choke 13 million barrels of daily global supply. That energy shock is fueling inflation worries, pushing 10-year Treasury yields toward 4.1% and hammering rate-sensitive sectors from tech to real estate.

Broad Selloff: Tech, Airlines Lead Losses

The carnage is widespread. Semiconductors cratered over 6-9%, with Micron, Western Digital and Applied Materials among the hardest hit; airlines like American and United sank 3%+ on jet fuel fears; and materials plunged 4.5%, led by Freeport-McMoRan (-9%) and Newmont (-9%).

Even Big Tech couldn't hold the line: Nvidia fell 1.7% as Nasdaq futures dropped 2.15%. Defense names like Palantir bucked the trend, with Rosenblatt hiking its target to 200 USD on war-driven AI demand. Energy stocks provided scant relief despite oil's rally.

Iran Escalation Risks Deeper S&P 500 Pain

Strategists warn this isn't over. Adam Crisafulli of Vital Knowledge flagged Iran's ”prolonged retaliatory response” targeting energy infrastructure, noting US interceptor stockpiles are depleting fast.

If Hormuz stays closed, MST Marquee's Saul Kavonic sees oil hitting triple digits: three times worse than 1970s embargoes, potentially dragging the S&P 500 toward 6,000. Yesterday's brief recovery on ”quick war” hopes has evaporated amid drone attacks on US facilities and Hezbollah strikes on Tel Aviv.

Support looms at 6,700 for the S&P 500, but VIX at 25.40 signals more volatility ahead. De-escalation could spark a rebound; prolonged chaos means testing March lows as oil dictates the macro narrative.

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