Friday closed out April with both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq at all-time records — their best monthly performances since 2020 — powered by a monster earnings season and early Iran peace hopes. Monday is a different story: conflicting reports of Iranian missiles targeting a U.S. warship near the Strait of Hormuz have stocks mixed and oil back on the move, reminding markets that the geopolitical risk premium isn't going away. This week's real tests are Palantir earnings tonight, AMD Tuesday, and the April jobs report Friday.
Apple posted fiscal Q2 EPS of $2.01 — up 21.8% year-over-year and 4.7% above consensus — on revenues of $56.99 billion, a new March quarter record. Shares climbed 3.2% on Friday, dragging the Nasdaq to an all-time high and giving the S&P 500 its first-ever close above 7,200. The iPhone 17's "extraordinary" demand was cited as the key driver, even though iPhone revenue itself missed estimates for the second consecutive quarter — a nuance worth flagging in any interview.
Oil fell nearly 3% on Friday after Iran sent an updated peace proposal through Pakistani mediators. President Trump said he was "not satisfied" with the offer and reaffirmed the U.S. naval blockade. By Monday morning, Iranian state media was reporting missiles struck a U.S. warship near Jask island during "Project Freedom" — the U.S. operation to guide stranded ships out of the Strait of Hormuz. CENTCOM denied any vessel was hit. The contradicting reports alone were enough to push WTI back above $103 and Brent past $110, proof that oil remains hostage to every headline out of the Gulf.
The FOMC voted to hold the fed funds rate at 3.5%–3.75% at its April 29 meeting, in what may have been Jerome Powell's last meeting as Chair. The headline decision was fully expected — but three hawkish dissents from Fed presidents rattled markets, pushing the 10-year yield as high as 4.45%, a nine-month high. Markets are now pricing essentially zero chance of a cut at the June meeting, and full-year futures suggest rates stay flat. The dissents matter because they signal the committee may be more willing to hike than markets previously assumed if energy-driven inflation persists.
GameStop announced Sunday it has made a non-binding offer to acquire eBay at $125 per share — half cash, half stock — implying a roughly 20% premium to Friday's close and valuing eBay at around $20 billion, nearly four times GameStop's own market cap. CEO Ryan Cohen told the WSJ the deal could generate $2 billion in annual savings and position the combined entity as a legitimate Amazon competitor. eBay jumped ~8% in pre-market; GameStop was largely unmoved. The deal would require GameStop to take on substantial debt, and analyst skepticism is high — but it's a live M&A story worth watching.
April's rally — the best monthly gain since 2020 for both the S&P and Nasdaq — was built on two pillars: an exceptionally strong earnings season (84% of S&P 500 reporters beat EPS, 20.7% above consensus) and hope that the Iran conflict was winding down. Monday's escalation headlines test whether that foundation holds. If oil goes back toward $114 and yields spike again, the "soft landing while at war" thesis gets harder to defend.
The market is effectively betting that high oil prices are temporary and that the Fed won't hike — but three Fed dissenters just said otherwise, and Iran just made the Hormuz closure look less temporary. Both assumptions are fragile at the same time, which is exactly the kind of dual-risk environment that creates sharp reversals.
The 10-year Treasury yield closed Friday at 4.35% — down 10 basis points from a nine-month high of 4.45% hit Wednesday when the Fed held rates and received three hawkish dissents. The pullback came as oil prices eased on Iran peace talk signals. Still, yields are sharply higher than where they started 2026, because elevated energy prices keep reigniting inflation concerns and have effectively erased any near-term Fed cut expectations. The June FOMC (June 16–17) is the next live event — and markets price only a 5% chance of a cut.
The S&P 500 finished April up roughly 10% — its best month since November 2020 — while the Nasdaq surged about 15%, its best since April 2020. Tech and consumer discretionary led; energy fell as oil pulled back Friday. Monday opens cautiously mixed as Iran headlines re-escalate. The VIX closed Friday at 16.99, near a two-week low — a sign markets were feeling comfortable — but that comfort is being tested intraday. Palantir reports after the close tonight; expectations are high and the stock carries a steep valuation premium heading in.
Q1 2026 GDP grew at a 2% annualized pace — up from 0.5% in Q4 2025 but below the Street's 2.2% estimate. The miss came from slowing consumption, though surging AI-related investment helped cushion the blow. Manufacturing PMI held at a four-year high of 52.7 in April, signaling continued expansion. Core PCE prices accelerated in March. Jobless claims recently hit their lowest level in nearly 50 years. The economy looks robust on employment and manufacturing — but the consumer is softening while energy costs bite. The April jobs report (NFP) drops Friday and is this week's single biggest macro event.
Whether CENTCOM confirms or denies the warship incident definitively — that single data point moves oil $3–5 either way and resets the week's risk tone. Palantir (PLTR) earnings after close today — high expectations, steep valuation, any miss could rattle AI sentiment AMD earnings Tuesday after close — key read on AI chip demand beyond Nvidia April Non-Farm Payrolls Friday morning — a miss below ~30K jobs could trigger a 3–5% Nasdaq correction per analyst estimates
Palantir (PLTR) earnings after close today — high expectations, steep valuation, any miss could rattle AI sentiment · AMD earnings Tuesday after close — key read on AI chip demand beyond Nvidia · April Non-Farm Payrolls Friday morning — a miss below ~30K jobs could trigger a 3–5% Nasdaq correction per analyst estimates
Energy stocks (XLE) fell ~1.3% on Friday even as Exxon and Chevron beat Q1 estimates — because oil prices dropped on Iran peace hopes. But Monday is reversing that as Hormuz tensions flare again. The key dynamic: major producers are beating EPS but reporting massive net income declines (Exxon -45%, Chevron -36%) because hedges and disruptions hit actual cash flows. Elevated oil is good for revenues but terrible for logistics and refining margins when supply routes are broken.
Tech (XLK) was the week's biggest S&P sector winner, gaining 1.5% on Friday alone. Apple's blowout and strong Mag 7 reports from Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, and Microsoft confirmed that AI capital expenditure is accelerating and enterprise adoption is real. The risk this week is Palantir and AMD: if either disappoints, the AI premium across the sector faces a quick repricing. Wall Street is projecting S&P 500 EPS growth of 19.7% in 2026, with most of that driven by AI infrastructure spend.
Consumer discretionary rose modestly Friday (XLY +0.2%), but the underlying picture is nuanced. Estée Lauder surged 11%+ on a beat-and-raise while Norwegian Cruise Line slid after cutting its full-year outlook, citing Middle East disruptions to its itineraries. The consumer is being squeezed from above: U.S. gas prices have risen 42–44% since the Iran war began in February, hitting an average of $4.30/gallon. Discretionary names exposed to travel and fuel costs remain vulnerable.
Corporate credit markets have stayed relatively calm despite spiking yields and an active war, partly because strong earnings have supported debt coverage ratios. Market breadth shows only 50% of S&P 500 stocks trading above their 50- and 200-day moving averages — not ideal. Dispersion is high, meaning gains are concentrated in a few names. If yields spike back toward 4.45% on renewed inflation fears or Fed hike pricing, credit spreads are the place to watch first for signs of broader stress.
The big picture right now is that markets are navigating a three-way tension: a hot economy, a genuine war affecting global energy supply, and a Fed that may be less dovish than investors hoped. April's rally was impressive — but it was built on the assumption that the Iran conflict would resolve quickly. Monday's headlines suggest that assumption deserves scrutiny. For anyone building a portfolio view or preparing for interviews, the question to ask is: what does the market have priced in, and what happens if even one of these pillars cracks?
Client portfolios are being stress-tested by elevated yields, oil price volatility, and a hawkish Fed pivot risk — all at once. Wealth managers are having uncomfortable conversations right now. Clients who piled into risk assets through April's rally are sitting on gains — but the geopolitical risk premium in oil hasn't disappeared, and three Fed dissenters just raised the possibility of rate hikes, not cuts. For HNW clients, the reallocation debate is live: BlackRock noted this week that certain bonds now offer attractive yields and can act as an AI-disruption buffer. The practical WM angle is portfolio rebalancing — trimming equity concentration after the 10–15% April run-up and adding duration selectively now that 10-year yields are near 4.35%, their highest sustained level of the cycle. In any wealth management conversation this week, be ready to discuss the risk/reward of locking in yield vs. staying long equities into a potentially volatile jobs report Friday.
GameStop's eBay bid is a live case study in hostile M&A mechanics and deal financing. The GameStop / eBay situation is exactly the kind of deal that gets discussed in IB interviews: a buyer with a market cap roughly one-quarter of its target, financing secured via a "highly confident letter" from TD Bank, and a CEO willing to go hostile directly to shareholders. The key topics here are accretion/dilution analysis (can $2B in synergies justify taking on ~$20B in debt?), deal structure (50/50 cash/stock), and strategic rationale (e-commerce consolidation vs. Amazon). If you're interviewing for M&A roles, practice walking through why this deal might or might not pass a "would a rational board approve this?" test.
The Iran-oil-Fed triangle is the defining macro trade of 2026 — and it's live this week. Anyone heading into macro research or global markets sales-and-trading needs to own the Iran/oil/Fed narrative cold. The core thesis: Hormuz closure → energy supply shock → inflation reacceleration → Fed hawkish tilt → yield spike → equity multiple compression. The counternarrative is backwardation in the oil futures curve (the market pricing in eventual resolution), which has kept credit and equities surprisingly resilient. This week, watch how the 10-year yield reacts to Monday's Hormuz headlines and Friday's NFP. Being able to articulate both sides of that trade — in under two minutes — is exactly what macro desk interviewers want to hear.
Earnings season is the best time to practice building a real investment thesis, not just reading recaps. With 63% of S&P 500 companies having reported and 84% beating EPS estimates, Q1 2026 is shaping up as one of the strongest earnings seasons on record — mostly driven by AI capex. For aspiring equity research analysts, this week is a masterclass: Palantir (AI software valuation), AMD (semiconductor demand signal), and Disney (consumer/media health check) all report. Practice the discipline of forming a pre-earnings view, noting the key metrics to watch, and then assessing how the actual results compare. That process — thesis, variant perception, data check — is exactly what ER associates do every earnings cycle.
When near-term futures prices are higher than longer-dated ones — in oil right now, it signals the market expects today's supply disruption to ease over time, which is part of why equities haven't collapsed despite $110 Brent.
"The market's resilience through the Iran conflict is partly explained by backwardation in the oil curve — futures are priced lower out the curve, which tells you the market still believes this disruption is temporary, even if the timeline keeps getting pushed out."
Greg Abel hosted his first annual shareholder meeting as CEO on May 1, with Berkshire Hathaway posting Q1 results that beat on EPS growth (up 120% per B share) but missed expectations on revenue. Abel reassured shareholders he will deploy Berkshire's record $380 billion cash pile — but only at the right valuations, and dismissed any talk of breaking up the conglomerate.