Stocks are kicking off May at all-time highs, powered by a blockbuster Apple earnings beat and a slight de-escalation signal in the U.S.-Iran conflict. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq just logged their best monthly performance since 2020, even as oil sits above $100 and the Fed has fully priced out rate cuts for this year. The market is threading a needle: strong earnings on one side, a geopolitical oil shock and hawkish Fed on the other.
Apple reported $111.2 billion in revenue for its fiscal Q2 2026, up 17% year-over-year and well above estimates, with double-digit growth across every geographic segment and product category. Shares climbed more than 3%, putting Apple on track for its first record closing high since December. The strong current-quarter outlook overshadowed the fact that iPhone revenue missed estimates for the second time in three quarters — investors chose to focus on the big picture, and it showed.
Oil had been the market's biggest wildcard all week, with WTI briefly touching a four-year high of $111 and Brent reaching $114. But Friday morning brought a partial relief: Iran reportedly sent a response through Pakistani mediators to the latest U.S. draft peace agreement. That was enough to knock WTI down nearly 2% to around $103. Oil is still up roughly 12% on the week — the Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, and the IEA has called the supply disruption unprecedented — but the slight diplomatic movement gave equities room to breathe.
The Fed held rates steady this week, as expected — but the decision was not unanimous. Fed Presidents Kashkari (Minneapolis) and Hammack (Cleveland) dissented, arguing it was inappropriate to signal that the next move would be a cut given current uncertainty. Markets have now fully priced out rate cuts for all of 2026, and traders are beginning to assign a small probability to a hike in 2027. The 10-year yield hit 4.42% mid-week before easing slightly Friday. Higher-for-longer is no longer a warning — it's the base case.
Not everything celebrated today. Roblox tumbled 24% in premarket after cutting its full-year 2026 bookings guidance from a midpoint of $6.16 billion down to $6.01 billion — a meaningful miss that signals slowing engagement growth. Separately, Spirit Airlines (FLYVQ) is reportedly preparing to cease operations after bailout talks with the U.S. government broke down and the carrier ran out of time to secure a $500 million lifeline. It's the budget airline's second bankruptcy in two years.
The S&P 500 and Nasdaq finishing April at all-time highs — despite an active U.S.-Iran war, $100+ oil, and a hawkish Fed — tells you how dominant this earnings season has been. Barclays' head of U.S. equity strategy cited strong economic growth and an intact tech story as the twin engines keeping this rally alive. The rally is real, but it's running on confidence that earnings can outpace macro headwinds — a thesis that gets tested harder if oil stays elevated or GDP slows further into Q2.
The market wants to price in peace and rate cuts that haven't arrived. Oil above $100 is a structural drag on consumers and corporate margins. The Fed is not cutting. Q1 GDP came in at just 2% annualized — propped up by AI investment, not consumption. The bull case demands that earnings continue to beat and that Iran diplomacy progresses. If either leg fails, the all-time highs become a ceiling, not a floor.
The 10-year Treasury yield sits at 4.39% — down 3 bps from Wednesday's post-Fed spike to 4.42%, which was a one-month high. The yield is still up roughly 8 basis points over the past month, reflecting the total erasure of rate-cut expectations for 2026. Core PCE accelerated in March, jobless claims hit nearly a 50-year low, and Fed dissents tilted the language hawkish — all of which has pushed the 2-year yield above 3.95%. The bond market is telling you the Fed is not your friend this year.
The S&P 500 at 7,255 is up over 0.65% on the day and just broke above 7,200 for the first time in history on Thursday's close. The Nasdaq at 25,157 is up over 1% and also at record levels. The Dow gained modestly, led by Apple (+4.6%), Merck (+4.1%), and Salesforce (+2.3%), while Amgen (-4.5%) and Chevron (-0.8%) lagged. The Russell 2000 is up a modest 0.10%, signaling that small caps are not leading this charge — this is a large-cap and tech-driven rally.
Q1 2026 GDP came in at 2% annualized — positive, but driven largely by a surge in AI capital investment, with private consumption slowing. California gas prices hit $6.01/gallon, a 30% increase since the Iran war started in late February, putting real pressure on household budgets. U.S. crude exports surged to record levels last week as global buyers scrambled to replace lost Middle Eastern supply — a boon for U.S. producers, but a sign of how dislocated global energy markets remain.
Whether Iran's response to the U.S. draft agreement contains enough substance to reopen the Strait of Hormuz — if yes, oil drops and the Fed's inflation calculus shifts meaningfully. Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (May 2) — Greg Abel's first as CEO; watch capital allocation signals and AAPL stake commentary Iran-U.S. peace talks progress — any movement through Pakistani mediators could send oil sharply lower Nvidia earnings (May 20) — biggest remaining earnings event; OpenAI revenue miss is already creating cautionary noise around AI demand
Berkshire Hathaway Annual Meeting (May 2) — Greg Abel's first as CEO; watch capital allocation signals and AAPL stake commentary · Iran-U.S. peace talks progress — any movement through Pakistani mediators could send oil sharply lower · Nvidia earnings (May 20) — biggest remaining earnings event; OpenAI revenue miss is already creating cautionary noise around AI demand
Apple's 17% revenue beat is the clearest signal yet that big tech is weathering the macro storm. Nvidia is up over 1% today as AI infrastructure spending data remains broadly supportive. Sandisk fell 5% despite an earnings beat — expectations were simply too high after a 360%+ YTD run. The sector is leading the market higher, but valuations are stretched and Nvidia's May 20 report is the next major test.
ExxonMobil and Chevron both beat Q1 profit expectations, but Chevron shares are slightly lower on the day as oil prices pull back from their weekly highs. Occidental Petroleum announced CEO Vicki Hollub is retiring after 10 years — COO Richard Jackson takes over June 1, with OXY reporting earnings May 5. U.S. crude exports hit record levels as buyers globally pivot away from disrupted Middle Eastern supply, creating a real revenue tailwind for domestic producers even as global prices fluctuate on diplomacy headlines.
Roblox is the biggest loser of the session, down 24% after slashing annual bookings guidance — a sign that gaming engagement growth is hitting a ceiling. Spirit Airlines heading toward shutdown is a reminder that budget travel's post-COVID margin squeeze never fully resolved. On the other hand, Apple's strong China performance and iPhone sales signal that premium consumer spending remains intact among higher-income households — the bifurcation between high-end and budget consumer is widening.
Caterpillar surged nearly 10% Thursday after beating Q1 earnings and raising its annual revenue outlook — a strong signal for global infrastructure and construction demand. CAT is considered a bellwether for global economic health, so its upside guidance matters beyond just the stock. Berkshire's Greg Abel noted that surging energy prices have already driven up input costs for Berkshire's industrial and chemical businesses, a dynamic that will take time to pass through to customer pricing. Watch industrials closely as an early read on margin pressure from elevated oil.
Here's the plain-English version of today: the stock market hit all-time highs because Apple had a monster quarter and Iran sent a peace signal that nudged oil lower. The Federal Reserve isn't cutting rates this year — in fact, some members are talking about hikes — because inflation is still too sticky, partly due to $100+ oil from the Strait of Hormuz being closed. The economy is growing, but it's being carried by tech investment, not everyday consumer spending. Gas above $6 in California is a real-world reminder that geopolitical events aren't just headlines — they hit your wallet.
Record equity markets + $100 oil + no Fed cuts = a genuinely tricky portfolio construction environment for wealth managers right now. Wealth managers are navigating a rare backdrop where equities are at all-time highs but the macro risks are unusually elevated. A client with a traditional 60/40 portfolio is sitting on strong equity gains, but bonds are under pressure from a hawkish Fed with a 4.39% 10-year yield and shrinking price appreciation potential. The conversation in client meetings right now centers on real assets and commodities (oil exposure through energy equities), trimming duration risk in fixed income, and whether to rebalance into cash given that high-yield savings rates of up to 5% are still available. The Berkshire annual meeting tomorrow is also a live wealth management case study — how Greg Abel signals capital allocation with $325 billion on the balance sheet will shape conversations about holding concentrated equity vs. deploying into acquisitions.
Apple's beat and Roblox's crater are exactly what earnings modeling is for — and today shows why it matters. Equity research analysts build financial models to predict earnings — and days like today are why. Apple's 17% revenue beat sent the stock toward record highs; Roblox's guidance cut sent it down 24%. In interviews, be ready to discuss how you'd approach building a DCF or comparables model for a consumer tech name, what metrics you'd focus on (MAUs, ARPU, bookings growth), and how guidance revisions impact target prices. Today's Apple call is an excellent example to reference when asked about a stock you've analyzed.
The Strait of Hormuz situation is a live, real-world commodities case study that hiring managers will expect you to know cold. Energy traders, commodity analysts, and energy investment bankers are all tracking the Iran-Hormuz situation as the defining market event of 2026. The IEA has called it an unprecedented supply shock; Brent went from $61 at the start of the year to above $114 — the largest quarterly price increase on an inflation-adjusted basis since 1988. If you're recruiting into energy finance, you need to be able to explain the Brent-WTI spread widening (currently ~$7), why U.S. crude exports are surging to records, and what the Strategic Petroleum Reserve is and when it gets deployed. This is interview-ready material right now.
Spirit Airlines' second bankruptcy in two years is a live restructuring case — and Berkshire's $325B cash pile signals M&A activity ahead. Two storylines today are pure investment banking fodder. First, Spirit Airlines is preparing to cease operations after its government bailout failed — a textbook distressed situation for restructuring bankers to dissect (failed DIP financing, creditor waterfall, going-concern wind-down vs. asset sale). Second, Greg Abel takes center stage at Berkshire tomorrow with $325 billion in cash and a stated interest in bolt-on acquisitions in energy and industrials. When a well-capitalized strategic buyer is openly signaling deployment intent, M&A bankers pay close attention. In coffee chats, ask bankers what they think Abel does with that cash pile — it's a great conversation starter.
When one or more Federal Reserve policymakers vote against the majority decision at an FOMC meeting — today's dissents signaled internal division over whether to even hint at future rate cuts, which pushed yields higher and rattled rate-sensitive assets.
"What stood out to me this week was the Fed dissents — it's not just that they held rates, it's that multiple members pushed back on any language suggesting cuts are coming, which tells you the Fed sees inflation risk as more live than the market had been pricing in, especially with oil staying above $100."
Greg Abel takes the stage Saturday, May 2 as Berkshire CEO for the first time, with $325 billion in cash and questions swirling on buybacks, the AAPL stake, and acquisition strategy. Abel told CNBC today that the Iran-driven energy spike has already hit input costs at Berkshire's chemical businesses — a real-world read on how the oil shock is filtering into corporate America.