Markets are ripping higher today on two big catalysts: AI chip earnings are blowing out estimates, and diplomatic progress on the U.S.-Iran conflict is hammering oil prices. The White House believes it is close to a one-page memorandum of understanding with Iran that would de-escalate the conflict and reopen the Strait of Hormuz — a move that would unwind the energy shock that's been rattling the macro backdrop since February. Meanwhile, AMD's 20% surge after a massive earnings beat is dragging the entire chip sector along for the ride, reminding markets that AI infrastructure demand is still accelerating, not peaking.
Advanced Micro Devices jumped roughly 20% after posting Q1 earnings and revenue well above Wall Street estimates, with its data-center segment up 57% year-over-year compared to the same quarter last year. CEO Lisa Su told CNBC that agentic AI is the key driver, and that the CPU market for AI data centers could grow 35% annually, reaching $120 billion by 2030. The beat lifted the entire chip complex — Nvidia, Intel, Micron, and Super Micro all gained meaningfully. Super Micro separately surged 15% on its own earnings beat, cementing the narrative: AI infrastructure spending is broadening, not narrowing, across the semiconductor supply chain.
WTI crude dropped over 9% to below $93 at session lows and Brent fell more than 8% below $101, extending Tuesday's 4% decline, after Axios reported the White House believes it is close to a one-page memorandum with Iran to end the two-month conflict. President Trump also paused "Project Freedom" — a naval operation escorting vessels through the Strait of Hormuz — citing progress in talks. Roughly 23,000 seafarers from 87 countries remain stranded in the Persian Gulf, and even with a deal, full supply-chain normalization is expected to take weeks, keeping energy market volatility elevated in the near term.
Walt Disney rose nearly 5% in its first earnings report under new CEO Josh D'Amaro, with fiscal Q2 revenue topping estimates on strength in streaming and theme parks. D'Amaro also flagged openness to new AI partnerships after a previous deal with OpenAI fell through. Uber jumped over 9% on higher quarterly gross bookings of $53.72 billion, up 25% year-over-year and above guidance. Delivery revenue surged 34% year-over-year to $5.07 billion, even as the mobility segment lagged. Both companies signal the same thing: despite pump prices up roughly 50% since the Iran war began, consumer spending is holding.
Nvidia announced a partnership with Corning to build three advanced optical manufacturing facilities in North Carolina and Texas dedicated to optical interconnect technologies. The facilities are expected to create at least 3,000 jobs and increase Corning's U.S. optical manufacturing capacity tenfold. Corning shares surged 17% on the news. Separately, Bloomberg reported Apple is in talks with both Intel and Samsung to produce its main processors inside the U.S., a move that helped Intel gain 6% on top of a 13% gain the session prior. Domestic semiconductor manufacturing is becoming a visible investment theme this earnings cycle.
Today is a reminder of how geopolitics and corporate earnings can work together to drive markets in the same direction at the same time. Oil falling roughly 9% in a single session removes the biggest near-term macro threat to equities — the inflation-from-energy channel — while AI earnings confirm that the investment cycle justifying high tech valuations is intact. When both risk factors move favorably simultaneously, markets tend to move hard and fast, and that's exactly what happened today.
The Iran deal isn't signed yet. The White House says Iranian responses on key points are expected within 48 hours, and nothing is agreed. If talks stall or collapse, oil could reverse violently — WTI was above $106 as recently as Monday. Simultaneously, chip stocks are making "parabolic moves" that analysts are flagging as potentially too obvious, raising the question of whether AI enthusiasm is getting ahead of the actual earnings delivery cadence. The market is pricing in a lot of good news on both fronts simultaneously, which raises the bar for any disappointment.
The 10-year Treasury yield edged down to approximately 4.42%, off from Monday's multi-month high near 4.44%, as falling oil prices cool the near-term inflation narrative. Yields had spiked sharply at the start of the week when Iranian attacks on the UAE threatened to escalate the conflict — energy price surges tend to push inflation expectations and yields higher simultaneously. Today's reversal is modest but directionally meaningful: a sustained oil drop would give the Fed more room and reduce the pressure on longer-duration assets.
The S&P 500 is tracking toward its third consecutive record close, up over 1.3% today from its prior close of 7,259. The Nasdaq is outperforming at nearly +1.8%, driven by semiconductors and AI hardware names. The Russell 2000 small-cap index is up roughly 1.75% as well — a sign of broad participation beyond mega-cap tech. Ten of eleven S&P 500 sectors are advancing; the lone laggard is energy, which is being hit directly by the oil price plunge. The VIX fear gauge has fallen to around 16, down from above 17 yesterday, signaling risk appetite is firmly back on.
Tuesday's JOLTS data showed job openings at 6.87 million in March — little changed month-over-month but slightly above the 6.8 million consensus, while hiring surged by 655,000 to 5.55 million, pushing the hiring rate to 3.5%. That's a 0.4 percentage point jump in a single month — the labor market is still absorbing workers even amid geopolitical uncertainty. Friday's nonfarm payrolls report is the next major macro test; consensus expects around 60,000 April jobs added, a dramatic slowdown from March's 178,000. That number carries extra weight given the Fed is watching both inflation (oil) and employment (slowdown risk) simultaneously.
Whether Iran formally responds to the U.S. framework within 48 hours — a deal opens the Strait and sustainably drops oil; a breakdown sends energy spiking and reverses today's equity gains. Friday April nonfarm payrolls — 60K expected vs. 178K prior, a big miss could force Fed rethink U.S.-Iran memorandum deadline — Iranian response expected within 48 hours, outcome moves oil and the entire macro picture ADP private payrolls released today — early read on labor market heading into Friday's report
Friday April nonfarm payrolls — 60K expected vs. 178K prior, a big miss could force Fed rethink · U.S.-Iran memorandum deadline — Iranian response expected within 48 hours, outcome moves oil and the entire macro picture · ADP private payrolls released today — early read on labor market heading into Friday's report
AMD's 20% surge and Super Micro's 15% gain headlined a broad chip rally. Nvidia, Intel, Micron, and Sandisk all added over 2%. The NYSE Semiconductor index is up over 4% today, bringing its year-to-date gain to roughly 60%. AI infrastructure demand is the engine — data center CPU demand is growing faster than supply, and AMD CEO Lisa Su raised forward guidance meaningfully. This is the sector to know cold for any tech or growth equity interview.
Energy is the only S&P 500 sector in the red today, hit directly by WTI's near-9% collapse. The Iran deal progress is removing the geopolitical risk premium that had been built into crude since February. Oil stocks are pricing in Strait of Hormuz reopening and a partial normalization of supply flows. This is the mirror image of Monday, when energy was the only sector that was green while everything else sold off. Energy is purely a geopolitical trade right now, not a fundamentals one.
Disney, Uber, and cruise lines (Carnival +8%, Royal Caribbean +7.6%) all surged on strong earnings and resilient consumer spending data. The key insight from these reports: even with gas prices up ~50% since the Iran war started, consumers are still spending on travel, entertainment, and delivery. This is bullish for the consumer-facing economy but also raises a question — if oil stays elevated longer term, at what point does the consumer finally crack? For now, the answer is not yet.
Corning's 17% gain on the Nvidia partnership and Intel's continued rally on Apple manufacturing talks highlight an emerging theme: large-cap companies are actively investing in U.S.-based production of semiconductors and optical components. This plays into both national security policy and the AI infrastructure buildout. For finance students, this sector is worth watching for M&A activity, government contract flow, and capital allocation stories heading into the back half of 2026.
The single most important thing to understand about today's market: oil and equities are moving in opposite directions, and that's the best possible combination for the economy right now. Lower oil = lower inflation = lower yield pressure = higher stock valuations, all at once. The Iran deal isn't locked in, but the market is pricing a meaningful probability that the Strait reopens — which would unwind one of the largest supply shocks since 2022. Pay attention to what the Fed says next about the inflation picture once oil data catches up.
Oil Volatility Is Reshaping Client Portfolio Risk Conversations Wealth managers are actively fielding client questions about energy exposure, inflation hedging, and portfolio durability in a high-oil environment. With WTI down nearly 9% today after spiking above $106 on Monday, the volatility is extreme — WTI has swung more than 15% in under 72 hours. For clients with concentrated energy positions or commodity-linked alternative investments, this week is a live case study in rebalancing triggers and risk-adjusted return conversations. If the Iran deal materializes, advisors will need to reassess inflation assumptions built into bond ladder strategies and real asset allocations. The WM angle here is not just "what's happening to oil" but "what does sustained oil volatility mean for the real return assumptions in client financial plans."
Geopolitical shocks create M&A pipelines — energy sector consolidation is accelerating When commodity prices swing violently and geopolitical risk is elevated, weaker energy producers become acquisition targets for larger, better-capitalized players. Devon Energy's merger with Coterra Energy and Raymond James's Strong Buy upgrade with a 40% implied upside are live examples of this dynamic playing out right now. In IBD interviews, being able to connect macro events (Iran war, oil supply shock) to M&A activity (distressed energy asset acquisitions, strategic consolidation) is exactly the kind of real-world linkage that impresses. Know the Devon-Coterra deal, know why energy M&A picks up in volatility cycles.
AMD's blowout quarter is a masterclass in how to read AI earnings — data centers, guidance, and GPU vs. CPU AMD's Q1 print — data center revenue up 57% YoY, CEO Lisa Su raising guidance and citing agentic AI demand — is exactly the kind of earnings event equity research analysts build their thesis updates around. For aspiring research analysts, today is a chance to study how a single earnings call moves an entire sector (Nvidia, Intel, Micron all up 2%+), how forward guidance language shapes stock movement more than the headline EPS beat, and how to frame a note upgrading or maintaining a rating in the context of a revised TAM ($120B CPU market by 2030). Practice articulating your AMD thesis out loud — it's a guaranteed coffee chat topic this week.
Iran deal = oil drop = yield move — this is the macro chain fixed income analysts must be able to narrate Today's Treasury move is small — yields down only ~2 basis points — but the directional logic is critical for anyone going into fixed income or macro strategy. Oil falling reduces near-term CPI expectations, which reduces pressure on the Fed to stay restrictive, which allows yields to ease. For interviews, being able to walk from a geopolitical event all the way through to a basis point move in the 10-year — and explain why it matters for duration-sensitive portfolios — is the kind of macro fluency that separates strong fixed income candidates. The 30-year yield briefly topped 5% earlier this week; watch whether it retreats meaningfully if the Iran deal closes.
A non-binding preliminary agreement between parties that outlines the intent to negotiate toward a formal deal — in today's context, the U.S.-Iran one-page MOU would de-escalate the conflict and set a framework for nuclear talks, without yet constituting a binding treaty.
"What's interesting about today's market is that oil and equities are moving in opposite directions simultaneously — the Iran deal progress is doing what no Fed pivot could: reducing the energy-driven inflation premium that's been overhanging Treasury yields and compressing equity multiples since February."
April nonfarm payrolls drop Friday, with consensus expecting only ~60,000 jobs added — a dramatic slowdown from March's 178,000 and one of the weakest reads since the pandemic. A big miss could force the Fed to pivot its language, moving rates and equities sharply. Watch this closely.