Saturday, March 21, 2026
☀️ A hummingbird's heart beats up to 1,260 times per minute—faster than the blink of an eye. Somewhere right now, one is doing exactly that, completely unbothered by market volatility.
March 20, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Super Micro Computer plunged 33.3% on Friday after co-founder Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw was charged with selling billions of dollars worth of servers equipped with sanctioned Nvidia hardware to China in violation of export control regulations. The charges represent a major blow to the company's credibility and raise questions about internal compliance controls. The stock had already been under pressure from broader tech weakness and geopolitical concerns, but the criminal charges accelerated the selloff as investors reassess the company's governance and legal exposure.
Crude prices topped $112 on Friday after Iraq declared a force majeure at all oilfields operated by foreign companies and drones struck two refineries in Kuwait. International benchmark Brent crude futures rose 3.26%, or $3.54, to close at $112.19 per barrel. Iraq oil ministry sources told Reuters that Baghdad had declared the force majeure because it cannot ship crude through the Strait of Hormuz. The oil shock is transmitting directly into inflation expectations and rate policy. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note rose about 10bps to 4.37% on Friday, reaching its highest level since July 2025, as investors continued to assess the impact of the war with Iran on inflation and brace for a more hawkish tone from the Federal Reserve. The market is now pricing in a scenario where the Fed cannot cut rates this year due to oil-driven inflation, which is devastating for equities and growth stocks.
Falling 2.3% today, the small cap index became the first major U.S. equity index to enter correction territory. It closed out at 2,437.27. The S&P 500 (-0.84%) is down to 6,551.67 as it rotates into the afternoon, with 139 equities advancing and 364 declining. The breadth collapse is a critical warning signal. Small-cap weakness reflects the market's repricing of interest rate expectations—the Russell 2000 is most sensitive to rate changes because small-cap earnings are more leveraged to economic growth and more dependent on cheap financing. The fact that only energy stocks advanced Friday (the only sector in green) reveals that the market is now bifurcated: energy benefiting from the oil shock, everything else suffering from higher rates and growth concerns.
Officials also upped their inflation outlook for this year. They now expect the personal consumption expenditures price index to reflect a 2.7% inflation rate, both on headline and core. Seven committee members have dots suggesting no cuts this year, which suggests that the Fed can take a patient approach going forward. And lost in the dots shuffle is that the median projection for the 'long-run' target range inched up to 3.125%. The Fed's hawkish pivot is now fully priced into markets. Fed funds futures trading is now looking at a less than 60% likelihood that the central bank will ease up on policy in December, according to the CME FedWatch tool. The combination of higher inflation projections and a patient Fed stance is the worst-case scenario for equities: growth slowing, inflation persisting, and policy constrained.
The VIX's 11.3% surge to 26.78 Friday reflects a fundamental repricing of market risk. Investors are now hedging for a scenario where oil-driven inflation persists, the Fed remains on hold, and corporate earnings fall due to margin compression and slowing growth. The VIX level of 26.78 is elevated but not yet in panic territory (which typically begins above 30), suggesting that while fear is rising, the market has not yet capitulated. The real test comes Monday when markets reopen and investors must decide whether to hold or sell into the weakness.
Iran and Israel exchanged strikes overnight, while the former also launched new attacks against energy sites in the Persian Gulf region. Iraq declared force majeure on all foreign-operated oilfields as it contends with military operations disrupting navigation through the Strait of Hormuz. Crude prices topped $112 on Friday after Iraq declared a force majeure at all oilfields operated by foreign companies and drones struck two refineries in Kuwait. International benchmark Brent crude futures rose 3.26%, or $3.54, to close at $112.19 per barrel. The oil shock is triggering a fundamental repricing of inflation expectations and growth prospects. The yield on the US 10-year Treasury note rose about 10bps to 4.37% on Friday, reaching its highest level since July 2025, as investors continued to assess the impact of the war with Iran on inflation and brace for a more hawkish tone from the Federal Reserve. The small-cap Russell 2000 declined more than 2% and slipped into correction territory — that is, a 10% decline from its latest high. The market is now pricing in a scenario where oil-driven inflation persists while the Fed remains on hold, squeezing corporate margins and growth expectations simultaneously—the classic stagflation trap that equity valuations cannot sustain.
💡 Force majeure — a legal clause that allows a party to suspend contractual obligations due to unforeseen circumstances beyond their control. Iraq's declaration means foreign oil companies cannot be held liable for failing to deliver crude while the Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted, but it also signals the severity of the supply shock.
Super Micro, which was down over 20% overnight in the premarket after Co-Founder Yih-Shyan 'Wally' Liaw was charged with selling billions of dollars worth of servers with sanctioned Nvidia hardware to China in violation of export control regulation. The charges represent a watershed moment for the AI infrastructure sector, exposing the tension between US national security interests and the global demand for AI compute. Supermicro tumbled 33.3% as it faced ongoing pressure following chip smuggling charges against its CEO. The scandal will likely trigger heightened scrutiny of export controls across the entire semiconductor supply chain and may accelerate US efforts to onshore AI chip manufacturing.
💡 Export controls — US government restrictions on selling certain advanced technologies (like AI chips) to designated countries, including China, to protect national security. Violations carry criminal penalties and can result in company-wide sanctions.
Planet's CEO called 2026 a 'transformational year' for the company, adding that Planet ended the year with a $900 million backlog, representing 79% growth over the previous year. In the fourth quarter, revenue of $86 million topped Wall Street's estimates of $78 million. The company broke even on adjusted earnings per share, compared to a $0.05 loss per share the Street expected. For the year ahead, Planet forecast revenue of $415 million to $440 million and an adjusted EBITDA profit of approximately $0 and $10 million. The backlog surge reflects structural demand for real-time Earth observation data from governments and enterprises navigating climate risk, supply chain disruption, and geopolitical uncertainty—a tailwind that should persist regardless of near-term equity market weakness.
FedEx (FDX) stock rose 8% before the bell on Friday after raising its full-year outlook due to a rise in revenue and package yields in its fiscal third quarter. The guidance raise is a rare bright spot in Friday's selloff and suggests that despite macro uncertainty, the logistics sector is benefiting from e-commerce growth and pricing power. The move contrasts sharply with the broader market's flight to safety, indicating that investors are selectively rotating into companies with visible earnings growth and pricing leverage.
Bitcoin's relative resilience Friday—closing down only 0.53% while equities tumbled—marks a notable divergence from the 2024 pattern where crypto and stocks moved in lockstep. Asset management firm Bitwise expects 2026 to be a breakout year for crypto, with Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), and Solana (CRYPTO: SOL) all pushing to new all-time highs as institutional forces reshape the market. Institutional adoption, spot ETF flows, on-chain growth, and a pro-crypto regulatory shift are now more powerful drivers than halving's or leverage-fueled boom–bust cycles. The weakness in Ethereum and Solana, however, reflects lingering concerns about altcoin fundamentals and the collapse of Solana's memecoin ecosystem earlier this year. The divergence suggests institutional capital is rotating into Bitcoin as a macro hedge while exiting riskier assets.
The economic engine that powered Solana through late 2025 — its memecoin ecosystem — has broken down. The on-chain data tracking holders, exchange flows, and DEX activity all confirm the same thing: the selling is structural, not seasonal. In the week ending February 2, Solana's total DEX volume stood at $118.2 billion, with Pump.fun accounting for $61.4 billion and Meteora contributing $20.1 billion. By the week ending February 23, total volume had crashed to $44.5 billion — a 62% decline. Pump.fun dropped to $30.5 billion. Meteora collapsed 83% to just $3.4 billion. Despite institutional buying via spot ETFs, the collapse in speculative activity reveals that Solana's value proposition remains tethered to retail trading volume rather than fundamental utility. The question for Q2 is whether the Alpenglow upgrade can shift the narrative from memecoin chain to institutional infrastructure.
A groundbreaking study published this month reveals that octopuses possess taste receptors throughout their arms, allowing them to sample food and navigate their environment without relying on central brain processing. This distributed sensory system means an octopus's arm can independently detect and respond to chemical signals—essentially 'thinking' with its limbs. The discovery has profound implications for how we understand intelligence and cognition: it suggests that sophisticated decision-making doesn't require a centralized command center, but can emerge from distributed networks of sensory and motor neurons. For investors and technologists, this finding is a reminder that nature has already solved many of the problems we're trying to solve with artificial intelligence—distributed processing, parallel computation, and adaptive learning. The octopus's architecture offers a blueprint for building more resilient, flexible AI systems that don't depend on a single point of failure.
💡 Chemoreceptors — sensory proteins that detect chemical signals (like taste and smell). The discovery that octopus arms have these receptors independent of the brain suggests a form of 'embodied cognition' where the body itself processes information.