Stocks rebounded on Wall Street after non-farm payrolls expanded in April and jobless rate dropped to five-decade low and wages gains were muted. Crude oil traded near recent lows. Regional banks drifted lower.

Five prominent regional bank stocks suffered double-digit losses as investors brace for more fallout in the sector. The Federal Reserve's tenth rate hike has added more burden on balance sheets of regional and smaller banks.

The growing and deepening crisis in the regional banking sector is not likely to go away anytime soon as the Federal Reserve hikes or holds rates at elevated levels. The stress in the banking sector is slowly spilling over to commercial real estate as banks curtail lending to shore up their faltering balance sheets.

The latest rate hike in the fed funds rate failed to end the rate path uncertainties as investors struggled to decipher Fed's next moves and how high rates will rise. With the labor market showing no signs of weakening and inflation staying significantly above the target level, marker uncertainty is likely to persist for months.

Caution prevailed in trading on Wall Street ahead of the Federal Reserve rate decision and commentary about the health of the U.S. economy. Crude oil drifted lower and bond yield trended lower after the private sector unexpectedly accelerated hirings in April .

Stocks, bonds, crude oil and natural gas declined as investors stayed on the sidelines ahead of the Fed's comments after the rate decision tomorrow and growing anxieties about the U.S. government debt ceiling uncertainties.

Stocks accelerated declines ahead of rate decision tomorrow and regional bank worries. Anxious investors are still not convinced that the ongoing regional banking crisis is over because higher rates are likely to inflict more pains on the banking industry.



Stocks traded lower and bond yields rose as investors turned cautious ahead of the rate decision this week. Crude oil closed lower in New York.

JP Morgan Chase agreed to acquire all deposits and substantial assets of the failed First Republic Bank over the weekend in a competitive bidding process.

The latest inflation index reading raised hopes that the Federal Reserve may not have to lift rates significantly above 5% and manage soft landing with little harm to the jobs market. Market rally broadened beyond tech stocks and major averages extended weekly gains.

Core rate of inflation remained elevated and significantly above the Fed's target rate of 2% in March. Intel reported the largest quarterly loss in its history. Amazon.com cloud revenue growth eased. Exxon Mobil and Chevron reported a surge in earnings, despite easing of oil prices.

Stocks soared on Wall Street after Meta Platforms reported better-than-expected revenue and earnings, fueling a tech rally for the second day in a row. Meta extended a five-month surge to 170%.

Economic growth in the first quarter slowed from the previous quarter as consumer spending growth decelerated. Tech stocks led the gainers after parent of Facebook reported quarterly results showing higher advertising revenue.

Benchmark indexes traded higher on the back of a rally in tech stocks powered by Microsoft and healthier earnings from several companies including McDonald's, Chipotle Mexican Grill and CoStar Group.



Benchmark indexes advanced in pre-market trading after Microsoft reported sharply higher sales and earnings and Google's parent Alphabet also reported less-than-expected decline in advertising revenue.