Daily Market Intelligence
The Brief
Finance students & early-career professionals
S&P 500 hits fresh all-time intraday high as Alphabet and Caterpillar crush earnings — but Meta's AI capex blowout and oil near $115 keep markets on edge.
Thursday, April 30, 2026 5-minute read
S&P 500
7,207
+1.10%
vs. prior close of 7,135.95 — fresh all-time intraday high reached today
Nasdaq
24,919
+1.00%
vs. prior close of 24,673.24 — new all-time high intraday despite tech drag from Meta and Microsoft
WTI Crude
$104.91
-1.84%
pulling back from intraday high of $111 — still up ~60% since U.S.-Iran war began Feb. 28
Brent
$114.01
-3.10%
closed lower after touching wartime high of $126 earlier today — Strait of Hormuz remains effectively shut
10Y Yield
4.43%
+1 bp
vs. prior close of 4.42% — elevated after Fed held rates and 3 members dissented hawkishly
Smart in 30 Seconds

Today is the last trading day of April, and it's been the S&P 500's best month since November 2020 — driven by earnings beats, AI infrastructure spending, and a market learning to trade around a wartime oil shock. The split story of the day: Alphabet and Caterpillar soared on results, while Meta and Microsoft dragged tech lower on AI capex sticker shock. Meanwhile, Q1 GDP came in at 2.0% — below the 2.3% estimate — and core PCE held at 3.2% year-over-year, keeping the Fed firmly on hold.

Earnings Season Meets Wartime Oil — A Tale of Two Markets

Alphabet Surges 10% — Best Day Since April 2025

Alphabet popped 10% intraday — its best single-day performance in over a year — after Q1 results showed strong enterprise AI client wins and Google Cloud revenues accelerating sharply. The move alone was enough to lift the Nasdaq and S&P 500 out of early session weakness, demonstrating just how much index-level performance is still tied to a handful of mega-cap names. This was a clean beat that rewarded the thesis that AI infrastructure spending can translate into real revenue, not just capex burns.

Meta Drops ~10% — $145B AI Capex Spooks Wall Street

Meta beat on Q1 earnings but sent its stock tumbling roughly 10% after raising its full-year capital expenditure guidance to a range of $125B–$145B, up from a prior range of $115B–$135B. The company cited higher component pricing and data center costs tied to AI buildout. The market's reaction was clear: profits don't matter if investors can't see the end of the spending runway. Meta also flagged that the Iran war and WhatsApp restrictions in Russia weighed on results — a reminder that geopolitics is now a line item for hyperscalers.

Caterpillar Jumps 10% — Industrials Carry the Dow

Caterpillar reported better-than-expected quarterly results and raised its annual revenue outlook, sending shares up roughly 10% and carrying the Dow Jones Industrial Average to a gain of over 850 points. CAT is viewed as a bellwether for global economic activity — its strength signals that construction and infrastructure demand remains robust, likely fueled by AI data center buildouts. The stock is now up over 160% in the last year. This was industrials doing what they do: quietly winning while tech steals the headlines.

Brent Touches $126 Before Pulling Back — Oil Volatility Remains Extreme

Brent crude surged to a four-year high of $126.41 intraday before closing lower around $114, after reports that the U.S. Central Command would brief President Trump on expanded military options against Iran. Trump has rejected Tehran's proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz, and the naval blockade stays in place pending a nuclear deal. The IEA has called the current Hormuz closure the "largest supply disruption in history." Goldman Sachs estimates exports through the chokepoint have fallen to just 4% of normal levels — which is why even a single headline can move oil by $10+ in a session.

Why investors cared.

Today was a microcosm of 2026's market: AI capex debate (are hyperscalers spending too much?), a wartime oil shock that has already lifted WTI ~60% since late February, a Fed that held rates with a hawkish dissent, and economic data (2.0% GDP, 3.2% core PCE) that confirms growth is slowing but inflation isn't cooperating. Every one of those forces is moving asset prices simultaneously — and they're pulling in different directions.

The core tension right now is straightforward: the market wants to rally on earnings strength, but oil prices near $115 feed directly into core inflation, which keeps the Fed sidelined or even biased toward hikes. Three Fed members dissented hawkishly on Wednesday, and traders are now pricing roughly a one-in-three chance of a rate hike by April 2027. That is not a bullish rate backdrop — and yet equities just posted their best month since 2020. Something has to give.

Follow the logic.

Strait of Hormuz closed →
Global oil supply shocks → Brent near $114, up ~60% since Feb. 28
Oil surge feeds inflation →
Core PCE at 3.2% YoY, highest since Nov. 2023 → Fed holds, dissents hawkishly
Fed stays on hold →
10Y yield at 4.43%, up 7 bps post-decision → borrowing costs stay elevated
Earnings mixed but strong →
Alphabet +10%, CAT +10% offset Meta -10% → S&P 500 grinds to new all-time high anyway

Breaking it down.

Rates & Treasury Yields

The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.43%, up from 4.42% the prior session — a new one-month high, having climbed 7 bps in the wake of the Fed's Wednesday hold. The key development: the Fed's decision was not unanimous, with three members dissenting over language that left the door open to eventual rate cuts. Markets are now pricing roughly a one-in-three chance of a rate hike by April 2027 — a dramatic shift that explains why the short end of the curve (2-year yield above 3.95%) is moving more aggressively than the long end.

Stocks & Indexes

The S&P 500 hit a fresh all-time intraday high today, capping what is on track to be the index's best month since November 2020 — a greater-than-10% April gain. The Dow surged over 850 points, led by Caterpillar (+10%) and Eli Lilly (+9%). The Nasdaq also rose ~1%, reaching a new intraday all-time high despite Microsoft and Meta dragging tech lower. The Russell 2000 was today's quiet star, up +1.62%, with strength from industrials, cyclicals, and utilities. Tech is the only S&P 500 sector in the red today.

Broader Economy

Q1 2026 GDP came in at 2.0% quarter-over-quarter — missing the 2.3% consensus estimate — with a sharp rebound in imports subtracting 1.3 percentage points from the headline number. Core PCE rose 0.3% month-over-month and 3.2% year-over-year, matching estimates but sitting at the highest annual reading since November 2023. Initial jobless claims fell sharply to 189k versus a consensus of 212k — a 50-year low — signaling the labor market remains resilient even as growth moderates. The combination of slowing GDP plus sticky inflation is the Fed's nightmare: no room to cut, no room to hike without risking a recession.

What to Watch

Whether Apple's Q2 results confirm or crack the AI consumer hardware thesis — any miss here hits the Nasdaq hard going into May. Apple earnings after the bell — analysts expect iPhone demand recovery in China and double-digit services growth Fed dissent fallout — watch for Fed speakers to clarify the hawkish minority view and how close a rate hike really is Iran-U.S. diplomatic developments — any signal of Hormuz Strait reopening could drop oil by $15–$20 instantly and reprice the whole inflation outlook

What to watch next

Apple earnings after the bell — analysts expect iPhone demand recovery in China and double-digit services growth · Fed dissent fallout — watch for Fed speakers to clarify the hawkish minority view and how close a rate hike really is · Iran-U.S. diplomatic developments — any signal of Hormuz Strait reopening could drop oil by $15–$20 instantly and reprice the whole inflation outlook

Who's moving and why.

Technology — Divided — AI winners vs. AI spenders

Tech is the only S&P 500 sector in the red today, even as the index hits all-time highs. The split: Alphabet +10% (revenue beats), Qualcomm +16% (earnings beat), versus Meta -10% and Microsoft -5% (AI capex shock). The market is beginning to separate AI monetizers from AI spenders — a distinction that will define tech investing in the second half of 2026.

Industrials — Outperforming — up 2.1% today

Caterpillar's 10% surge anchored the Dow and helped industrials lead the S&P 500 higher, up 2.1% on the day. CAT is a global bellwether — its raised revenue outlook signals that infrastructure and AI data center construction demand is holding firm despite macro headwinds. If you're in an interview and asked about a non-tech beneficiary of the AI boom, Caterpillar is your answer.

Energy — Extreme volatility — Brent swung from $126 to $114 in one session

Energy is the most geopolitically sensitive sector in the market right now. With Hormuz effectively closed, WTI has surged ~60% since late February and California pump prices hit $6.01/gallon today. Any diplomatic breakthrough could crater energy stocks overnight; any escalation could push crude toward the $140–$150 range analysts are flagging. Energy sector positioning is essentially a bet on U.S.-Iran diplomacy.

Healthcare — Strong — Eli Lilly up ~9% on blowout results

Eli Lilly posted Q1 revenue of $19.80 billion, up 56% year-over-year, driven by its weight-loss drug franchise and raised its full-year sales outlook to $82B–$85B (up from $80B–$83B). Healthcare is quietly one of 2026's strongest sectors, with GLP-1 drugs providing a durable revenue tailwind that doesn't depend on the Fed, Iran, or AI spending cycles. Worth knowing for healthcare investing conversations.

What people in finance are actually thinking about today.

For everyone in finance

The market just had its best month since November 2020 — but it did it while oil nearly doubled from a year ago, the Fed refused to cut rates, and three central bank officials voted to lean hawkish. April's rally tells you that earnings and innovation can overpower macro fear in the short run. But the longer Hormuz stays closed and core PCE stays at 3.2%, the harder it becomes for the market to keep climbing. May will be a real test.

Wealth Management

Wartime oil shock forces a complete rethink of client portfolio positioning — energy, fixed income, and alternatives are all live conversations right now. Wealth managers are navigating one of the trickiest environments in years: equity markets at all-time highs, but driven by a handful of mega-caps; oil near $115 threatening to reaccelerate inflation; and a Fed that just signaled it may hike before it cuts. For client conversations, the key themes are: rebalancing away from passive tech-heavy index exposure, revisiting energy and commodity allocations as an inflation hedge, and reconsidering duration risk in fixed income with the 10-year at 4.43% and climbing. Clients who own long-duration bonds are quietly underwater again — that's a conversation that needs to happen.

Investment Banking (Energy & Natural Resources)

The Iran oil shock is the biggest M&A and financing story in energy banking in years. With WTI up ~60% since late February and Hormuz choked off, energy companies are flush with cash flow and looking at acquisitions, refinancing, and strategic pivots. Energy bankers are busy with deal flow across upstream producers, refiners, and LNG exporters as buyers scramble for non-Hormuz supply. If you're recruiting for IB, showing you understand the Hormuz supply chain and its financial consequences will immediately separate you from other candidates.

Equity Research (Technology)

The AI capex debate — how much is too much? — is the defining modeling question for tech analysts right now. Meta's $125B–$145B capex guidance and Microsoft's $190B spending plan have equity research analysts furiously re-running DCF models, adjusting free cash flow forecasts, and debating whether AI infrastructure ROI will materialize in time to justify current valuations. The Alphabet vs. Meta divergence today is exactly the kind of single-stock earnings event that research analysts live for. If you're targeting tech equity research, be ready to discuss AI capex payback periods and cloud revenue growth multiples.

Macro / Global Markets Trading

Oil, rates, and geopolitics are all moving simultaneously — this is the environment macro traders train for. Today's session had Brent swinging $12 in a single day, the 10-year yield at a one-month high, a Fed with three hawkish dissenters, and GDP missing estimates. For anyone interested in macro trading or global markets roles at banks and hedge funds, this environment is your case study: how do you trade the correlation between oil prices, inflation expectations, and rate markets when a geopolitical event is the key driver? Practice articulating a trade thesis around the Hormuz closure — long energy, short long-duration Treasuries — and be ready to defend it.

What to actually use in a conversation.

  • "The Fed held rates steady on April 29 but saw three hawkish dissents, pushing the 10-year yield to 4.43% and markets to price roughly a one-in-three chance of a rate hike by April 2027 — a meaningful shift from the cut cycle the market expected a year ago."
  • "Brent crude touched $126 intraday today before settling near $114 — still up roughly 60% since the U.S.-Iran war began in late February — because the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries about 20% of global oil supply, remains effectively closed."
  • "Q1 2026 GDP came in at 2.0%, below the 2.3% estimate, while core PCE held at 3.2% year-over-year — its highest reading since November 2023 — creating a stagflationary-adjacent environment where the Fed can't cut without risking inflation and can't hike without risking growth."
Core PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index)

The Fed's preferred inflation gauge, which strips out food and energy prices to measure underlying price pressure. Today's reading: +3.2% year-over-year — well above the Fed's 2% target and the highest since November 2023, which is why rate cuts are off the table.

For an interview, coffee chat, or networking call

"What's interesting about today's market is that the S&P just hit an all-time high, but it's doing it in an environment where the Fed is leaning hawkish, oil is near $115, and core inflation is at a multi-year high — which tells you how much earnings power and AI spending momentum are carrying this market right now, and also how fragile the setup could be if any of those variables break the wrong way."

Powell Stays — Fed Chair Blocks His Own Replacement

Fed Chair Jerome Powell confirmed he will remain on the Board of Governors indefinitely while a DOJ probe into the Fed's headquarters renovation continues — effectively blocking the Senate from seating his nominated successor, Kevin Warsh. This keeps policy continuity intact for now but adds a political wildcard to the Fed's already complex credibility picture heading into the second half of 2026.

Sources
CNBC (Fed rate decision, hawkish dissents, 10-year yield move, Eli Lilly and Meta earnings details, Brent oil wartime high) · TheStreet (intraday S&P 500, Nasdaq, Russell 2000 levels and sector performance on April 30) · Trading Economics (Brent and WTI price levels, Hormuz context, 10-year yield data) · Yahoo Finance / Proactive Investors (Q1 GDP at 2.0%, core PCE at 3.2%, jobless claims at 189k, Caterpillar and Eli Lilly earnings moves) · CNN Business / Investing.com (Brent touching $126 intraday high, WTI settlement near $105, Goldman Sachs Hormuz flow estimates)