Markets opened May under pressure as Iranian state media reported missiles struck a U.S. vessel near the Strait of Hormuz — the U.S. denied it, but oil still spiked 5%+, which is enough to rattle stocks. This comes right after Friday's record closes for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, driven by a blowout Apple quarter and Iran peace-deal optimism. The real tension: equities are priced for de-escalation, oil is priced for war, and neither side is blinking yet.
Brent crude futures jumped more than 5% to above $113–$114 per barrel on Monday — the highest level since May 2022 — after Iranian state media claimed missiles struck a U.S. vessel near the Strait of Hormuz. The UAE confirmed its Fujairah oil hub and an ADNOC tanker were also struck. U.S. Central Command denied the warship report, which trimmed gains slightly, but prices stayed elevated. This matters because the Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 20% of global oil flows, and every dollar added to Brent raises inflation expectations and complicates central bank decisions worldwide.
Apple reported fiscal Q2 2026 earnings of $2.01 per share — up ~22% year over year and beating estimates by nearly 5% — on total revenue of $111.18 billion, also a beat. Shares gained more than 3% Friday, propelling the Nasdaq to an all-time closing high of 25,114. The result matters for finance students to understand: Apple's scale means it moves index-level ETFs. A beat this size shifts revenue forecasts for services and hardware suppliers across the supply chain, and it signals that consumer spending on premium tech remains healthy despite macro uncertainty.
Greg Abel chaired his first Berkshire Hathaway annual meeting as CEO over the weekend in Omaha, addressing topics from AI to capital allocation. He outlined a "core four" equity positions — Apple, American Express, Moody's, and Coca-Cola — and emphasized he'll take a more active portfolio management role than Buffett. Meanwhile, Buffett himself, speaking from the audience, said the investing environment isn't "ideal" for Berkshire and that deploying its ~$373 billion cash pile requires a genuinely big decline. For investors, the message is clear: Berkshire isn't buying this dip, and that tells you something about current valuations.
Following last week's Fed meeting, regional presidents Neel Kashkari (Minneapolis) and Beth Hammack (Cleveland) publicly explained their dissents — both pushed back on any language suggesting the next rate move would be a cut. Their concern: sticky inflation driven by energy prices and a still-robust labor market (initial jobless claims recently hit near 50-year lows). The 10-year Treasury yield had run up to 4.45% — a 9-month high — before easing to 4.35% on Friday. This is the rate that prices mortgages, corporate debt, and equity valuations, so when it moves 10 bps in a day, every asset class feels it.
Last week was one of the best in years for U.S. equities — the S&P 500 posted its best monthly return since November 2020 and both the S&P and Nasdaq closed at all-time highs on Friday. But Monday opened with a reminder that a Hormuz-driven oil shock is still live. Brent at $114 is not a "priced-in" number — it's an inflationary wildcard that could force the Fed to stay higher for longer, compress margins for every energy-intensive sector, and drag consumer sentiment lower. The market's ability to hold near records while this plays out is the real story.
The bulls point to record earnings, falling tariff anxiety, and AI capex booming toward $751 billion in 2026 among the top five hyperscalers. The bears point to a 10-year yield that was at a 9-month high days ago, Brent crude up ~90% year over year, and Buffett sitting on $373 billion saying the market still isn't cheap enough. Both sides have real evidence. The question for this week: does Iran de-escalate, or does "Project Freedom" — Trump's plan to escort ships through Hormuz — make things worse before they get better?
The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.35% — down 10 basis points from Wednesday's 9-month high of 4.45%, as Friday's oil pullback cooled inflation fears momentarily. But the trend is still upward: yields have been rising since the Iran conflict began in late February, driven by energy-price inflation fears and hawkish Fed dissents. With Brent back above $114 today, expect yields to face upward pressure again this week. A rise above 4.45% again would be a concrete signal that the market is pricing in no Fed cuts in 2026.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq closed at all-time records Friday — 7,230 and 25,114 respectively — capping April as the best month for U.S. equities since November 2020. Monday opened with both pulling back modestly (S&P -0.36%, Nasdaq -0.14%) on Hormuz headlines, while the Dow shed closer to 1%, weighed by energy and industrial names. Tech is the relative safe haven today, which makes sense: Apple's blowout quarter and hyperscaler capex upgrades keep the AI narrative intact even when geopolitics bite.
Q1 2026 GDP came in at 2% annualized — a pickup from 0.5% in Q4 2025 but still below the 2.2% consensus estimate. The miss was partly offset by surging AI-driven investment. Core PCE prices accelerated in March, and initial jobless claims hit near 50-year lows, meaning the labor market remains too strong for the Fed to cut. ISM Manufacturing prices hit a four-year high in April. Bottom line: the economy is running hot enough that the Fed has no cover to ease, especially with oil prices this elevated.
Whether Iran allows "Project Freedom" shipping corridor to operate — or fires again. Oil stays above $110 if it doesn't. Iran-U.S. "Project Freedom" update — any escalation or de-escalation in the Strait of Hormuz will be the single biggest market mover this week April Nonfarm Payrolls (Friday) — a strong print above ~200K would cement the "no cuts in 2026" narrative and push yields higher Palantir, AMD, and Arm Holdings earnings next week — the next AI earnings read after Apple's beat sets a high bar
Iran-U.S. "Project Freedom" update — any escalation or de-escalation in the Strait of Hormuz will be the single biggest market mover this week · April Nonfarm Payrolls (Friday) — a strong print above ~200K would cement the "no cuts in 2026" narrative and push yields higher · Palantir, AMD, and Arm Holdings earnings next week — the next AI earnings read after Apple's beat sets a high bar
Counterintuitively, Energy Select Sector ETF (XLE) declined Friday even as Exxon and Chevron both beat Q1 earnings estimates. The reason: oil prices were falling Friday on Iran peace-deal hopes, so energy stocks gave back gains. Today oil is back up sharply — watch energy names reverse. This divergence between oil price and energy equity performance is a classic trading-desk interview topic.
The Information Technology SPDR (XLK) gained 1.5% Friday, driven by Apple's beat. Goldman Sachs now estimates the top five hyperscalers — Amazon, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Oracle — will spend $751 billion in capex in 2026, up 83% versus 2025. That number was revised up nearly $80 billion during earnings season alone. AI infrastructure spending is the structural story underpinning tech's outperformance; it's also the reason semiconductor stocks (SOX index) have hit 15 intraday all-time highs in 2026 already.
The Dow Transports are already testing their old breakout level, and the Dow Industrials still can't hold above 50,000. Market bulls want transports to confirm the rally — a classic Dow Theory signal. If transports fail here, the S&P and Nasdaq's record highs start looking narrowly led by megacap tech rather than a healthy broad advance. For finance interviews, this is the "market breadth" conversation: price and breadth divergences often precede corrections.
Consumer Discretionary (XLY) rose modestly Friday. Apple's services and hardware beat suggests premium consumer demand is healthy. But gasoline is hovering near 4-year highs — a direct tax on consumer wallets. If Brent stays above $110, expect consumer confidence surveys to deteriorate and discretionary spending to face headwinds by summer, which would hit retail and travel names hardest.
Here's the one thing to internalize today: markets can be at all-time highs and under threat at the same time. Friday's record close and Monday's pullback aren't contradictions — they're the market repricing the same set of facts as new information arrives (missile reports, denial, oil swings). Knowing how to explain that dynamic — "the market is forward-looking and highly sensitive to oil-driven inflation expectations right now" — is exactly the kind of clarity that impresses in interviews and coffee chats.
The Berkshire Cash Pile + High Yields = A Wealth Management Inflection Point With the 10-year at 4.35% and Berkshire Hathaway sitting on $373 billion in cash and T-bills, the wealth management conversation this week centers on asset allocation. Clients who've been 60/40 are sitting with bonds that actually yield something, while equities trade at ~21x forward P/E — above the historical average of 16x. Advisors are being asked: is now the time to rotate from growth equities into fixed income or alternatives? The Buffett signal (staying in cash, calling the market not "ideal") is something high-net-worth clients will bring up in reviews. Knowing how to contextualize it — and why duration risk still matters even at 4.35% if inflation persists — is a real differentiator for WM candidates.
Apple and hyperscaler capex revisions are a live modeling exercise Apple's Q2 beat — EPS up 22% YoY, revenue at $111B — means every sell-side analyst covering Apple, Qualcomm, TSMC, and services peers is updating their models today. Goldman's upward revision of hyperscaler capex by $80 billion mid-season is exactly the kind of estimate-change event that drives price targets. If you're recruiting for equity research, being able to walk through what Apple's services gross margin expansion means for FY2026 estimates — or how a $751B capex figure flows into semiconductor revenue — is a direct interview advantage right now.
The rates and oil feedback loop is the trade of the week The 10-year yield moving 10 basis points in a single session — from 4.45% to 4.35% — on oil price news alone is a textbook rates/macro correlation trade. S&T desks are actively positioning around the Hormuz situation: long energy futures, short duration Treasuries if oil re-accelerates, long vol as geopolitical uncertainty remains elevated. For students targeting S&T roles, understanding why an oil spike raises inflation expectations, which raises yields, which compresses bond prices — and being able to articulate the trade that follows each step — is exactly what interviewers test in technical rounds.
Oil volatility reshapes energy M&A calculus in real time Brent at $114 — up roughly 90% year over year — fundamentally changes the DCF math for energy assets. Higher commodity price assumptions raise the enterprise value of upstream producers, making acquisitions more expensive but also making existing holders more likely to sell at premium valuations. Meanwhile, the Brent-WTI spread has widened to ~$12-15/barrel, creating pricing complexity for cross-border deals. Energy IB coverage groups are actively revising comps and precedent transaction analysis this week. For students targeting energy IB, knowing the Brent-WTI spread, what it signals about regional supply disruptions, and how it affects deal pricing is a concrete talking point right now.
The price difference between Brent crude (global benchmark, North Sea origin) and WTI crude (U.S. benchmark, Cushing, OK). When the spread widens — currently ~$12-15/barrel — it typically signals heightened supply disruption risk in global markets (like a Hormuz closure) that hits Brent harder than the more domestically-priced WTI.
"The market's near record highs and today's sell-off aren't contradictory — equities are repricing in real time as Brent hits a 4-year high on Hormuz escalation, which raises inflation expectations, pushes the Fed toward holding rates higher for longer, and compresses the multiple on growth stocks."
Trump's Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh raised concerns at his Senate confirmation hearing last week with comments about Fed independence that six former central bank officials called "unclear and confusing at best." Warsh declined to comment to CNBC — making this a developing story worth tracking for anyone heading into macro or rates roles.