5 Things to Know

5 things to know before the stock market opens Friday

1. Stocks relatively flat after another S&P 500 record high

People are seen on Wall St. outside the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York City, March 19, 2021.
Brendan McDermid | Reuters

U.S. stock futures were mixed Friday, a day after modest gains pushed the S&P 500 to another closing record and the Dow Jones Industrial Average within 24 points from Monday's record close. The Nasdaq was the real winner Thursday, logging a 1% gain on strength in tech names. The Nasdaq was less than 2% from its February record close. Lending support to stocks, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on Thursday called the U.S. economic recovery from the Covid pandemic "uneven" and said temporarily higher prices won't lead to worrisome inflation. Those comments offered investors a reassurance that ultra-accommodative Covid-era monetary policies won't change soon.

2. Treasury yields climb after producer prices data

The 10-year Treasury yield ticked higher, but remained below 1.7% and March's run of 14-month highs. The Labor Department on Friday morning reported that producer prices in March rose 1%, with an ex-food and energy core inflation rate gain of 0.5%. Both were stronger than expected. A website outage at the Labor Department delayed the normal 8:30 a.m. ET by about 25 minutes. The bond market has been at odds with the Fed this year, as traders pushed yields up on the belief that stronger economic growth and inflation will force central bankers to hike near-zero short-term interest rates and taper massive asset purchases sooner than forecast.

3. Covid cases in U.S. creep higher even as vaccinations ramp up

A member of the Maryland National Guard hands out Post-It notes with numbers to people arriving without appointments at the mass coronavirus vaccination site at Hagerstown Premium Outlets on April 07, 2021 in Hagerstown, Maryland.
Chip Somodevilla | Getty Images

U.S. coronavirus cases are creeping higher as infections in many parts of the world are skyrocketing. Even with the U.S. vaccinating about 3 million people per day and nearly 20% of the American population fully inoculated, new daily Covid cases and deaths were still, respectively, averaging over 66,000 and nearly 1,000. In a fast-deteriorating situation in Brazil, that country this week became just the third, after the U.S. and Peru, to report a 24-hour tally of Covid deaths that exceeded 4,000. In the state of Rio de Janeiro, emergency services are under their biggest strain since the pandemic began.

4. Florida sues CDC to allow cruises to resume U.S. sailings

Royal Caribbean’s Explorer of the Seas cruise ship is docked at PortMiami on March 02, 2021 in Miami, Florida.
Joe Raedle | Getty Images

Florida Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis announced Thursday the state will file a lawsuit against the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, demanding cruise ships be allowed to resume U.S. sailings immediately. Royal Caribbean CEO Richard Fain said he would like the cruise industry to be "treated in a very similar way to the airlines," which have been allowed to fly. However, Fain said he's optimistic about the possible resumption of U.S. sailings in the second half of this year, citing President Joe Biden's goal for society to return to a semblance of normal by July 4.

5. Amazon lead widens in union vote at Alabama warehouse

An RWDSU union rep holds a sign outside the Amazon fulfillment warehouse at the center of a unionization drive on March 29, 2021 in Bessemer, Alabama.
Elijah Nouvelage | Getty Images

With about half the ballots counted, Amazon held a commanding lead in the historic U.S. worker vote on whether to unionize at one of the e-commerce giant's Alabama warehouses. Counting will resume Friday. There have been hundreds of contested ballots, most of which were challenged by Amazon. Roughly 55% of the eligible workers at Amazon's Bessemer warehouse voted. For many years, major unions have quietly been talking to Amazon workers about organizing. They've faced steep challenges in the U.S., where none of the company's warehouses is organized. Unions are common among Amazon's workforce in Europe.

— The Associated Press contributed to this report. Follow all the market action like a pro on CNBC Pro. Get the latest on the pandemic with CNBC's coronavirus blog.