Daily Market Intelligence
The Brief
Finance students & early-career professionals
Stocks rebound as oil pulls back — Iran ceasefire holds, but the Strait of Hormuz stays the dominant market variable
Tuesday, May 5, 2026 5-minute read
S&P 500
7,240
+0.55%
vs. Monday's close of 7,200.75; recovering from Iran-driven selloff
Nasdaq
25,243
+0.70%
vs. Monday's close of 25,067.80; led by chipmaker surge
WTI Crude
$102.65
-3.50%
down from Monday's $106.42 close; easing as U.S. says ceasefire still in place
Brent
$111.45
-2.60%
down from Monday's $114.44; still ~$56 above year-ago levels on Hormuz disruption
10Y Yield
4.43%
+1 bp
vs. Monday's 4.42%; elevated on energy-driven inflation fears, up ~13 bps year-over-year
Smart in 30 Seconds

Markets bounced Tuesday as oil pulled back from Monday's surge — triggered by U.S. officials stating the Iran ceasefire remains intact despite continued low-level Strait of Hormuz skirmishes. Tech led the recovery, with chipmakers surging on an Apple-Intel chip manufacturing report. Palantir dropped despite blowout earnings, a classic "buy the rumor, sell the news" moment. The overarching question: can equities hold record levels if oil stays above $100 and the Strait stays partially closed?

Tuesday Movers: Chips Rip, Oil Dips, Palantir Slips

Intel Surges 10%+ on Apple Chip Manufacturing Talks

Bloomberg reported that Apple held early-stage discussions with Intel and Samsung about manufacturing its main processors in the U.S., potentially diversifying away from TSMC. Intel shares surged over 10% — their best day in years — dragging Micron, Western Digital, Seagate, Lam Research, ARM, and AMD all up 6%+ in a chipmaker sympathy rally. The Apple angle matters: Tim Cook flagged supply constraints on last week's earnings call tied to AI-driven chip demand. Intel's foundry turnaround is still early-stage, and Apple may not follow through, but the headline alone was enough to ignite the semiconductor space.

Palantir Falls 4.5% Despite Its Best-Ever Quarter

Palantir reported Q1 revenue of $1.63 billion — up 85% year-over-year and the fastest growth since its 2020 IPO — crushed EPS estimates ($0.33 vs. $0.28 expected), and raised full-year guidance to 71% growth, well above the prior $7.27 billion consensus. Net income quadrupled to $870 million. The stock still fell ~4.5% intraday. Why? The stock had already surged ~1,900% over three years; the market had priced in perfection. This is a textbook case of elevated expectations versus strong-but-not-surprising results — important to understand for any equity analysis conversation.

Oil Pulls Back as U.S. Says Iran Ceasefire Holds

After Monday's 4-6% oil spike — when Iran attacked UAE infrastructure and the U.S. Navy repelled Iranian small boats — WTI fell more than 3% Tuesday morning after Defense Secretary Hegseth stated the ceasefire "is not over" and framed current activity as "low level." Brent dropped over 2% to ~$111. Still, Goldman Sachs warned that easily accessible refined product buffers — naphtha, LPG, jet fuel — are being depleted rapidly, and global oil stocks could fall to 98 days of demand by end of May, down from 101 days now.

Pfizer Beats, Reaffirms Guidance — Pharma Steady Amid Chaos

Pfizer reported Q1 revenue of $14.5 billion, up 5% year-over-year and above the $13.8 billion consensus. Adjusted EPS of $0.75 beat the $0.72 estimate. The company reaffirmed full-year revenue guidance of $59.5–$62.5 billion. Growth in newer treatments offset declining COVID product demand. Shares climbed ~2.2% — a modest but meaningful move that signals pharma's defensive resilience when macro risk is elevated. For any portfolio conversation, this is the kind of steady compounder that wealth managers reach for when geopolitical noise spikes.

Why investors cared.

Monday's Iran-UAE escalation — Iranian missiles intercepted over UAE soil, a fire at the Fujairah oil hub, U.S. Navy repelling Iranian small boats — briefly felt like a full market crisis. Tuesday's partial recovery shows how sensitive markets are to incremental war-or-peace signals from the Strait of Hormuz. A single Hegseth press conference saying "ceasefire is not over" was enough to drop oil $4 a barrel and send equities green. This is a market operating on headline risk in real time.

Earnings season has been exceptional — 80% of S&P 500 reporters beat EPS, with 31% average year-over-year growth — yet the Strait of Hormuz situation could unwind all of that optimism if oil stays above $100 and inflation expectations continue ticking higher. The 10-year breakeven inflation rate has risen to 2.50%, the Fed is on hold, and a 15% probability of a December rate hike is being priced in. Strong corporate fundamentals and geopolitical energy risk are pulling in opposite directions, and something will have to give.

Follow the logic.

Iran attacks UAE oil hub →
WTI +4%, Brent +6% Monday; global supply fears spike
Energy prices surge →
10-year yield up, inflation breakevens rise, Fed hike odds creep higher
Hegseth: ceasefire intact →
Oil reverses Tuesday; equity risk appetite returns, chips rally
Goldman warns on product shortages →
Refined fuel buffers depleting; jet fuel, LPG at risk in Asia and Africa

Breaking it down.

Rates & Treasury Yields

The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.43%, up ~1 bp from Monday and roughly 13 bps above year-ago levels — a direct response to energy-driven inflation concerns. The yield curve remains positively sloped (10Y/2Y spread ~+0.50%), which is healthy, but 10-year breakeven inflation has climbed to 2.50%, signaling the market is not confident in the Fed's path back to 2% so long as oil stays elevated. The Fed is widely expected to hold rates unchanged through year-end, though a December hike is now at 15% probability and rising.

Stocks & Indexes

The S&P 500 gained ~0.55% Tuesday, recovering from Monday's 0.41% Iran-driven decline, and remains above its historic 7,200 threshold first crossed last week. The Nasdaq led large-cap indexes up ~0.70%, powered by chipmakers (Intel +10%, Micron +5%). Small caps (Russell 2000) slipped 0.60%, suggesting risk appetite is selective — investors are buying quality tech, not broad small-cap exposure. Only Energy and Technology sectors closed positive on Monday; today the rebound is tech-driven.

Broader Economy

The April jobs report — due Friday — is projected to show only ~60,000 new jobs added, a sharp drop from 178,000 in March, and would mark a significant labor market deceleration. The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 4.3%. Meanwhile, California gasoline hit $6.01/gallon, up ~30% since the U.S.-Iran conflict began in late February. Consumer inflation pressure from energy costs is now tangible at the pump, and it's feeding into breakeven inflation expectations that the Fed cannot ignore.

What to Watch

Whether the Strait of Hormuz reopens to normal traffic — it's the single variable that controls oil, inflation, Fed policy, and market direction simultaneously Friday April Jobs Report (est. ~60K added vs. 178K prior — a miss could spook rate markets) Fed official speeches this week for any shift in tone on hikes given oil-driven inflation Strait of Hormuz shipping data — Goldman flags jet fuel and naphtha shortages developing in Asia, Africa

What to watch next

Friday April Jobs Report (est. ~60K added vs. 178K prior — a miss could spook rate markets) · Fed official speeches this week for any shift in tone on hikes given oil-driven inflation · Strait of Hormuz shipping data — Goldman flags jet fuel and naphtha shortages developing in Asia, Africa

Who's moving and why.

Energy — Volatile but bullish long-term

Energy was the only S&P 500 sector to gain on Monday (+0.95%), and remains the clearest beneficiary of Hormuz disruption. APA, Diamondback, and Marathon Petroleum led gains. Chevron's CEO warned publicly of fuel shortages in some global regions. With Brent still at $111+ — a 4-year high — and Goldman flagging depleting refined product buffers, energy equities are pricing in a prolonged closure. This is the sector interview candidates should know cold right now.

Technology / Semiconductors — Strong rally; AI demand intact

Chipmakers dominated Tuesday's session: Intel +10%, Micron +5%, Western Digital, Seagate, and Lam Research all up 6%+. The Apple-Intel chip manufacturing story reignited the domestic semiconductor thesis. Micron separately rose on reports that its high-bandwidth memory (HBM) products — the AI chip memory of choice — are sold out through 2026. This sector is a direct beneficiary of both the AI capex buildout and the push to onshore chip supply chains.

Healthcare / Pharma — Defensive and steady

Pfizer's Q1 beat — $14.5B revenue vs. $13.8B expected, EPS $0.75 vs. $0.72 expected — with full guidance reaffirmed is a signal that large-cap pharma is delivering stability when macro risk is elevated. Newer treatments are offsetting COVID tailwind decay. Healthcare often outperforms in geopolitical risk environments because revenues are largely insulated from oil prices and trade disruptions — a key point for portfolio construction conversations.

Industrials / Materials — Under pressure

Industrials fell 1.02% and Materials dropped 1.62% on Monday — the two worst-performing S&P sectors. Home Depot (-3.5%), Nike (-2.95%), and Boeing (-2.64%) led the Dow lower. Supply chain disruptions from the Strait closure hit these sectors hardest because they depend on global raw material flows and shipping routes. The UPS selloff (down 10.5% Monday before a small bounce Tuesday) signals logistics networks are repricing for elevated geopolitical disruption.

What people in finance are actually thinking about today.

For everyone in finance

Here's the simple version: The U.S. and Iran are in an active military conflict centered on the Strait of Hormuz — a waterway that, before the war, carried about one-fifth of the world's crude oil. Every missile fired, every ship escorted, every press conference from a U.S. defense official moves oil prices by 2-4% in minutes, which then ripples through inflation expectations, Treasury yields, and every sector of the stock market. Strong earnings are keeping stocks near record highs, but oil is the wild card that could undo everything.

Wealth Management

Oil volatility is reshaping client portfolio risk profiles — and creating real rebalancing opportunities With WTI having surged from ~$75 to over $106 this year (up ~40%), and now pulling back on ceasefire signals, wealth managers are navigating a genuinely bifurcated environment: energy holdings are outperforming, while bond durations are being shortened to hedge inflation risk. The 10-year breakeven at 2.50% means real yields are compressing, which historically supports gold and real assets. Advisors at firms like Mercer are flagging that the long-term equity growth case remains intact — but near-term volatility in oil demands active asset allocation review. In coffee chats, mention: "The Hormuz situation is forcing advisors to revisit inflation assumptions across the entire fixed income allocation."

Investment Banking (Energy & Natural Resources)

The Iran war is creating a once-in-a-decade deal environment for energy bankers Energy companies are rushing to lock in hedges, refinance at current valuations, and explore M&A while their stock prices are elevated. Bankers in oil & gas are working on asset deals, reserve-based lending restructurings, and equity raises for E&P companies benefiting from $100+ crude. If you're recruiting into IB, knowing the Hormuz supply chain story and its impact on upstream/downstream valuations is a differentiated talking point right now.

Macro / Global Macro Trading

This market is a live macro trading case study — oil, rates, FX, and equities all moving in real time on geopolitics The oil-inflation-yield-equity chain playing out this week is exactly the framework macro traders build positions around. The interplay between WTI prices, 10-year breakevens, Fed rate hike probabilities, and the dollar is all live right now. If you're targeting macro roles at hedge funds or prop desks, being able to narrate the Hormuz situation through a rates and FX lens — not just an equity lens — will separate you in interviews.

Credit / Fixed Income Analysis

Inflation risk and yield curve dynamics are front and center — perfect timing to know your fixed income story With the 10-year at 4.43%, the 30-year approaching 5%, and breakeven inflation at 2.50%, the fixed income market is signaling genuine uncertainty about the Fed's path. Credit analysts are reassessing spread durations, especially in high-yield energy and industrials, where supply chain disruption risk is real. The Treasury refunding announcement this week — expected to hold at $125B quarterly — is also a key event for fixed income desks. Understanding how oil prices transmit into credit spreads is a strong interview differentiator.

What to actually use in a conversation.

  • Palantir reported 85% revenue growth and net income that quadrupled year-over-year, yet the stock fell 4.5% — a real-world example of how elevated valuations and priced-in expectations can cause a stock to sell off on exceptional, but not surprising, results.
  • The Strait of Hormuz, which before the U.S.-Iran war carried roughly one-fifth of global crude, is still largely closed — and Goldman Sachs now warns that refined product buffers like jet fuel and naphtha could reach critically low levels in certain regions by end of May, meaning this is no longer just an oil price story but a potential physical supply shortage.
  • The 10-year Treasury yield rising in tandem with oil prices illustrates the energy-inflation-rates transmission mechanism: higher oil feeds into CPI expectations, which pushes Treasury yields up, which tightens financial conditions — even without the Fed moving the policy rate.
Breakeven Inflation Rate

The difference between nominal Treasury yields and TIPS yields of the same maturity; it represents the market's implied forecast for average inflation over that period — currently 2.50% on the 10-year, meaning markets expect inflation to average 2.50% annually over the next decade.

For an interview, coffee chat, or networking call

"What's interesting about this week is that strong earnings are actually competing with an oil shock for market direction — Palantir just posted its fastest revenue growth ever, but a single Hegseth press conference on the Strait moved oil more than the earnings beat moved the stock."

Berkshire Post-Buffett Era Begins

Greg Abel chaired his first Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting as CEO this past weekend in Omaha, delivering what shareholders described as a steady, composed debut. Abel demonstrated a firm grasp of Berkshire's sprawling operations — a key watch item as markets assess whether the post-Buffett transition preserves the conglomerate's long-standing investment discipline.

Sources
CNBC (S&P 500, Nasdaq, Dow closing levels May 4; Palantir Q1 earnings detail; oil price moves and Iran ceasefire reporting; 10-year Treasury yield headlines; Berkshire annual meeting coverage) · TheStreet (May 4 and May 5 live market coverage — sector performance, Russell 2000, Intel surge, Pfizer beat, Micron move, Palantir intraday reaction) · Trading Economics (WTI and Brent crude price levels and Middle East escalation context; 10-year Treasury yield data for May 5) · CNBC / Fortune (Brent crude May 5 morning price of ~$111.45, WTI ~$102.65 intraday; Goldman Sachs refined product shortage note) · Proactive Investors (May 5 intraday market open detail — Intel +10%, chipmaker rally, Palantir -4.5%, Hegseth press conference summary) · Business Wire / Yahoo Finance (Palantir official Q1 2026 earnings release — revenue, EPS, guidance figures) · PrimeRates.com (Treasury yield curve snapshot — 10Y/2Y spread, breakeven inflation levels)