Overview:

The week of March 30 compresses five sessions into four ahead of Good Friday. Nike reports Tuesday March 31 with consensus EPS of $0.29 — a ~45% YoY decline — as tariff, China, and product cycle headwinds converge. March NFP at +57K consensus drops on Good Friday into bond markets alone, deferring equity repricing to April 6 — which is also the day Trump's Iran strike pause deadline expires. ISM Manufacturing PMI, ADP, and Consumer Confidence complete a data-heavy week with binary geopolitical overhang.

NEW YORK, March 29, 2026 — The week of March 30 is structurally one of the most event-dense four-day trading periods of the first quarter. U.S. equity markets close at 1:00 PM ET on Thursday April 2 ahead of Good Friday on April 3, compressing five trading sessions into an abbreviated four. Non-Farm Payrolls for March land at 8:30 AM ET on Good Friday — when equity markets are closed — channelling the most important monthly employment data into bond markets alone. Nike (NKE) reports Tuesday March 31 with a consensus EPS of $0.29, implying approximately a 45% year-over-year decline that will test management’s narrative around tariff mitigation, China stabilisation, and product cycle recovery. And all of it — the NFP, the consumer data, the earnings — accumulates over a long weekend into Monday April 6’s market open, which is also the day Trump’s extended pause on Iran strikes expires. The positioning calculus for the week is unusual: data and earnings will set the analytical frame, but the geopolitical variable retains the power to override any fundamental signal.


Nike (NKE) — Tuesday March 31, consensus EPS $0.29: the consumer’s state of health in a difficult operating environment

Nike (NYSE: NKE) reports fiscal Q3 FY2026 earnings on Tuesday March 31, and the consensus expectation — EPS of $0.29, implying approximately a 45% year-over-year decline — frames this as one of the more consequential consumer brand earnings of the current cycle. Nike’s challenges entering this quarter are well-documented: a $1.5 billion annualised tariff cost that management has been attempting to offset through price increases and supply chain rerouting; persistent weakness in China revenue that has reflected both competitive pressure from domestic brands and the macro deterioration in Chinese consumer spending; and a product cycle that CEO Elliott Hill — who returned to the company in late 2024 — has described as requiring a multi-year rebuild of Nike’s performance sports positioning.

The Iran conflict adds a new layer of complexity. Higher fuel costs increase Nike’s logistics expenses across its global supply chain network, and the consumer confidence deterioration visible in March sentiment data raises questions about whether the U.S. consumer’s willingness to absorb premium footwear price increases has softened. At the same time, Nike’s portfolio of must-have sneaker collaborations and retro classic lines has historically demonstrated demand resilience through economic uncertainty — the $0.29 consensus estimate already reflects a pessimistic fundamental assumption, and a beat even on that depressed base could provide some technical relief.

For the market, Nike’s most important disclosure will not be the EPS number but the forward guidance: specifically, whether management can provide any confidence that the tariff cost trajectory is manageable, the China business has found a floor, and the product cycle is generating early signs of recovery. A guidance withdrawal or a material further lowering of expectations would be read as evidence that Nike’s structural challenges are deeper than the consensus already prices. A maintained or modestly lowered guidance range, combined with positive commentary on sell-through rates and direct-to-consumer momentum, would be interpreted as evidence that the recovery thesis — however slow-moving — remains intact.


The macro data calendar — four releases in four sessions that will set the Q2 economic baseline

The week’s economic calendar is unusually heavy for a short week, anchored by four macro releases that will collectively define the Q2 2026 economic baseline. On Monday March 30, the March Consumer Confidence survey provides the first read of the week on household psychology under the Iran conflict’s fuel and markets impact — a figure that will contextualize whether the University of Michigan’s Sentiment deterioration from Friday reflects a temporary shock response or a more durable consumption restraint signal.

Wednesday April 1 delivers the day’s three most consequential releases simultaneously: the March ISM Manufacturing PMI, the March ADP employment report, and February construction spending. The ISM Manufacturing figure is particularly significant given the competing pressures at play: energy cost inflation from the Iran conflict argues for margin compression and potential demand softening in energy-intensive industrial sectors, while the broader AI infrastructure buildout continues to support capital spending in electronics and advanced manufacturing. A reading below 50 (contraction territory) would reinforce the stagflation narrative; a reading above 50 would provide evidence that manufacturing is weathering the energy shock more robustly than the consumer confidence data implies. The ADP employment report — historically a preview for Friday’s NFP — will be the week’s first labour market data point and will calibrate expectations heading into the Good Friday NFP release.


March NFP at +57K consensus — what the labour market data means for Fed positioning

The March Non-Farm Payrolls consensus of +57,000 represents a modest recovery from February’s –92,000 print — itself a number that shocked markets with the depth of its contraction — but remains dramatically below the pace of job creation that would characterise a healthy labour market. The unemployment rate’s recent move to 4.4% frames the March figure against a backdrop of what the Federal Reserve would characterise as a labour market that is cooling more rapidly than its rate path assumptions had modelled. For the Fed, the March NFP carries a specific policy dilemma: a number below the +57,000 consensus would strengthen the argument for rate cuts as growth support, but the simultaneous presence of energy-driven inflation — import prices up 1.3% in February, the largest monthly gain in nearly four years — argues against easing into a supply-side inflation shock.

The CME FedWatch probability of any 2026 rate cut has collapsed from 95% one month ago to single digits, with futures markets briefly assigning a non-trivial probability to a rate hike. That dramatic reversal in rate expectations is the most significant macro repricing of the month — and the March NFP is the first data point that could either validate the “higher for longer” consensus or, if dramatically weaker than expected, force a reassessment of whether growth concerns now outweigh inflation risks in the Fed’s reaction function. The April 28–29 FOMC meeting is the formal policy decision point that will follow the NFP’s accumulation in fixed income markets over the long weekend.


Other earnings on the calendar — TD Synnex, McCormick, Conagra, and the consumer staples read

Beyond Nike, the week’s earnings calendar includes several names with meaningful sector read-through potential. TD Synnex (SNX) reports in the technology distribution space, providing a real-time read on enterprise technology spending patterns and the degree to which AI infrastructure investment has offset or reversed any Iran-driven caution in corporate IT budgets. McCormick (MKC) and Conagra Brands (CAG) both report, providing consecutive reads on the consumer staples sector’s pricing power and volume dynamics in an environment where higher energy costs are compressing household discretionary budgets. Both companies have significant commodity cost exposures — spices, grains, and agricultural inputs — that interact with the Iran conflict’s broader commodity price shock in ways that will be worth monitoring for indications of input cost inflation transmitting into final consumer prices.

The week’s earnings calendar, while lighter in headline names than the prior two weeks, collectively addresses the consumer’s state of health across multiple price points and product categories — a mosaic that will provide the most comprehensive available picture of how the Iran conflict is affecting U.S. household spending in real time. For context on how to track these releases ahead of each session’s open, PreMarket Daily’s daily trading plan framework and earnings season guide provide relevant analytical structure.


The April 6 convergence — NFP, Iran deadline, and the market’s first full trading session of April

Monday April 6 is the calendar event that defines the entire week’s positioning logic. Every data point released between March 30 and April 3 accumulates over the Good Friday and Easter weekend into a single opening bell that simultaneously processes: the March NFP’s labour market signal; Nike’s consumer read and management forward guidance; the ISM, ADP, Consumer Confidence, and construction spending data; and the resolution of Trump’s April 6 Iran strike deadline. Whether that deadline produces a ceasefire, a further extension, or a resumption of strikes will be the single highest-leverage variable — capable of moving oil, equities, and rates more in one trading session than any combination of the week’s economic data.

The structural setup for April 6 is one of the highest event-compression moments of 2026. Portfolios that enter the long weekend positioned for a specific Iran outcome carry non-negligible gap risk across the weekend’s news flow. The VIX at 31.05 — above the 30 threshold historically associated with acute institutional risk aversion — is the market’s quantified expression of that uncertainty, and it is unlikely to compress meaningfully until the April 6 deadline produces a resolution that markets can price with some confidence about its durability.


The week in framing — what to watch, when, and why

Monday March 30: Consumer Confidence — sets the household psychology baseline for the week. Tuesday March 31: Nike earnings after close — the consumer sector’s most high-profile read. Wednesday April 1: ISM Manufacturing PMI, ADP employment, and February construction spending — the industrial and labour market pulse. Thursday April 2: equity markets close at 1 PM for Good Friday. Friday April 3: NFP at 8:30 AM ET into bond markets only — the most important data point of the week, inaccessible to equity markets until Monday. Monday April 6: Iran deadline expires, equity markets reopen to the combined weight of everything that accumulated over the long weekend. The week’s analytical value is not in any single data point but in the mosaic — and in the positioning decisions that must be made before Friday’s equity close without knowing how the NFP and the Iran deadline will resolve. That uncertainty is the defining feature of the April 6 convergence, and it is why the week beginning March 30 is one of the more analytically demanding of the year.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational and educational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

The PreMarket Desk at PreMarket Daily covers US equity pre-market analysis, publishing before the 9:30 AM EST open every trading day. Analysis is cross-referenced with live real-time market data and news,...