Markets are recovering Tuesday after Monday's Iran-driven selloff, with oil dropping as Defense Secretary Hegseth confirmed the U.S.-Iran ceasefire still holds. Earnings are doing the heavy lifting: Palantir crushed it with 85% revenue growth, Pinterest popped 15% on AI-powered ad strength, and Tyson beat on both top and bottom lines. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq are both at or near all-time highs, but energy prices — still above $100/barrel for WTI — and sticky Treasury yields mean the macro tension isn't gone, just paused.
Palantir (PLTR) delivered a blowout Q1, reporting $1.63 billion in revenue — up 85% year-over-year and well above the $1.54 billion Wall Street expected. U.S. revenue alone surged 104% YoY to $1.28 billion, driven by government and commercial AI platform deals. The company raised full-year revenue guidance to $7.65–$7.66 billion, implying 71% annual growth — 10 points above its prior guide. Despite the monster beat, PLTR shares fell nearly 3% in Tuesday trading, likely on valuation concerns; the stock is already up ~23-fold since end of 2022 and carries a stretched multiple.
Pinterest (PINS) jumped 15% after reporting Q1 results and issuing Q2 revenue guidance of $1.13–$1.15 billion, topping analyst estimates of $1.11 billion. The company credited AI-driven bidding optimizations for helping offset pressure from large retailers who pulled back on ad spend due to tariff uncertainty. It's a notable reversal — Pinterest had missed on EPS for five straight quarters before this print. The takeaway: AI isn't just a cost-cutting story; it's becoming a real revenue enabler in digital advertising.
Duolingo (DUOL) beat revenue estimates ($292M vs. $288.5M expected) and showed strong user metrics — daily active users up 21% to 56.5 million, paid subscribers up 21% to 12.5 million. So why did the stock tumble 13%? The market was spooked by softer Q2 bookings growth guidance, signaling a near-term deceleration before an expected re-acceleration later in 2026. This is a classic "sell the guide" reaction — when top-line beats are overshadowed by cautious forward commentary.
WTI crude fell over 3% to around $102.76/barrel Tuesday, after spiking to $106.42 Monday when Iran launched missiles at the UAE and U.S. naval vessels faced fire near the Strait of Hormuz. The pullback came after Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth stated the ceasefire "certainly holds," calming the most acute fears of full escalation. Still, oil remains ~$56/barrel above year-ago levels, and Goldman Sachs warned that refined product inventories — particularly jet fuel and naphtha — are being depleted rapidly, with some regions at risk of localized shortages.
Monday's Middle East escalation (UAE missile intercepts, Fujairah port fire, Strait of Hormuz tensions) sent oil up ~5% and knocked stocks lower across the board. Tuesday's partial reversal shows how binary this market has become: geopolitical headlines are moving assets more than any Fed meeting or earnings print. Oil above $100 is a real inflation wildcard, and with the 10-year Treasury yield near 4.43% — up from around 4.30% a month ago — the Fed's path stays complicated regardless of how markets trade on any given day.
The core tension right now: strong U.S. corporate earnings (S&P 500 on track for double-digit Q1 EPS growth) are pushing stocks to all-time highs, while a war-driven oil shock above $100/barrel is keeping inflation elevated and Treasury yields sticky — making it very hard for the Fed to cut rates. Markets currently price no cuts for the rest of 2026, with a 15% probability of a December hike creeping back in.
The 10-year Treasury yield is sitting at 4.43% — up roughly 9 basis points over the past month and 13 bps above year-ago levels — as oil-driven inflation fears keep rates from falling. The 10Y/2Y spread is +50 bps, meaning the curve is positively sloped but flat. That's technically healthy, but it also reflects a market that doesn't see the Fed cutting anytime soon. A Friday jobs report expected to show only ~60K April payrolls (vs. 178K in March) could shift that calculus fast.
The S&P 500 is up ~0.64% and the Nasdaq is up ~0.81% on Tuesday, both hovering near all-time highs. The Russell 2000 is leading with +1.41%, a sign that the risk-on trade is broadening beyond mega-cap tech. Monday saw the Dow drop 557 points on Iran fears, but Tuesday's bounce shows the market's underlying earnings-driven bid remains intact. Breadth is decent: nearly 60% of U.S. issues are advancing today.
March JOLTS data released Tuesday showed 6.87 million job openings — essentially unchanged from February and slightly above consensus. More importantly, the hiring rate jumped sharply to 3.5%, up 0.4 percentage points, signaling that employers are actively onboarding workers despite uncertainty. Friday's April jobs report is expected to show a big slowdown to ~60K payrolls, down from 178K in March, which would be the weakest print in years and a potential market mover.
Friday's April payrolls print — if it comes in well below 60K, rate-cut expectations could snap back quickly and reshape the entire near-term market narrative. Friday's April jobs report — consensus at ~60K, a big miss or beat here moves yields and rate expectations hard AMD earnings after the bell today — semiconductor bellwether, critical for read-through on AI chip demand Strait of Hormuz developments overnight — any re-escalation sends oil back above $110 and reverses today's equity gains
Friday's April jobs report — consensus at ~60K, a big miss or beat here moves yields and rate expectations hard · AMD earnings after the bell today — semiconductor bellwether, critical for read-through on AI chip demand · Strait of Hormuz developments overnight — any re-escalation sends oil back above $110 and reverses today's equity gains
Energy was the only sector that finished Monday's session higher (+0.95%) as oil surged on Iran tensions. Today it's giving back some gains as WTI drops 3%+, but crude above $100 means energy company cash flows remain strong. Goldman Sachs flagged rapidly thinning refined product buffers globally — a structural supply story, not just a geopolitical spike. Interview point: know the difference between a demand-driven and a supply-shock oil rally, because they have different inflation and Fed implications.
Tech is driving today's bounce, with Nasdaq up ~0.81% and several AI-adjacent names pushing to new highs. Palantir's 85% revenue growth print and Pinterest's AI ad revenue beat confirm that enterprise AI monetization is accelerating. Nvidia (reporting May 20) is the next major test — CEO Jensen Huang has already warned that China market share has fallen to zero following export restrictions, which means the domestic and European demand pipeline needs to compensate for a $19.67B revenue hole.
Tyson Foods beat Q1 estimates on both EPS ($0.87 vs. $0.79 expected) and revenue ($13.65B vs. $13.58B expected), crediting a sustained protein demand trend for the outperformance. But broader consumer staples lagged Monday (-1.17%), hit by the macro selloff. Norwegian Cruise Line dropped 9% Tuesday after cutting its full-year profit outlook, citing rising fuel costs from oil shock and weaker bookings in Europe — a direct war-driven impact on discretionary travel.
With the U.S. actively escorting vessels through the Strait of Hormuz and Defense Secretary Hegseth publicly managing ceasefire messaging, defense budgets are back in focus. GE Vernova shares rose on a new nuclear-plus-gas partnership with Blue Energy for a Texas data center — a signal that defense-adjacent energy infrastructure is becoming an investment theme. Palantir's 84% YoY growth in U.S. government revenue also reflects accelerating DoD AI spend.
Oil above $100/barrel isn't just an energy sector story — it flows through to airline tickets, shipping costs, food prices, and mortgage rates. When WTI jumps 5% in a day (as it did Monday), that keeps inflation expectations elevated, which keeps Treasury yields up, which keeps mortgage rates up. That's why Tuesday's oil pullback actually mattered for everyone's personal finances, not just traders. Understanding this chain — oil → inflation → yields → borrowing costs — is one of the most practical mental models you can carry into any finance interview or client conversation.
Oil shock and sticky yields are reshaping client portfolio conversations right now. Wealth managers are fielding calls from clients spooked by $100+ oil and markets at all-time highs simultaneously. The core reallocation question is whether to trim equities at record levels and add to short-duration fixed income (which now yields ~4.4% on the 10-year) or stay overweight equities given continued double-digit earnings growth. Alternative assets — particularly real assets like energy infrastructure and commodities — are gaining attention as an inflation hedge. If you're in a networking coffee chat with a WM professional this week, ask how they're thinking about energy exposure in balanced portfolios and whether they're extending or shortening bond duration.
Today's earnings wave is a live masterclass in how to read a "good beat, bad guide" situation. Duolingo beat revenue and user growth metrics but fell 13% because the Q2 guidance implied deceleration. Palantir beat massively but dropped 3% on valuation overhang. Equity research analysts live in exactly this space — the question isn't just did they beat, but what does the forward guide imply for the next 12 months of estimates? If you're building toward ER, practice writing a quick comp-table update on one of today's reports and think through what EPS revisions the guidance implies.
Geopolitical risk is no longer a tail event — it's a baseline input. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, Goldman Sachs is warning about regional refined-product shortages, and Norwegian Cruise Line just cut guidance directly because of fuel cost spikes and war-driven booking weakness. Credit analysts and risk managers at banks, insurance firms, and corporates are being asked to run updated scenarios for $120+ oil. If you're pursuing a credit or risk path, being able to articulate how an oil price shock flows through a company's cost structure and credit metrics (EBITDA margins, interest coverage, leverage) is a highly differentiated skill right now.
The Iran war is generating real M&A and financing activity in energy and defense infrastructure. GE Vernova's partnership with Blue Energy on a nuclear SMR project for Texas data centers is the kind of deal that shows up in an energy IB pipeline. With oil prices elevated and energy security suddenly a national priority, there's increased deal flow around LNG terminals, pipeline infrastructure, and nuclear power development. IB analysts in energy coverage need to understand both the geopolitics of the Strait of Hormuz (which routes ~20% of global oil) and the financing structures of energy infrastructure — project finance, tax equity, and offtake agreements are all live conversation topics right now.
A SaaS performance benchmark where a company's revenue growth rate plus its profit margin should equal or exceed 40%; scores above 40 signal strong, capital-efficient growth. Palantir's score hit 145% this quarter — an extraordinary outlier.
"What's interesting about today's market is that we have the S&P near all-time highs driven by genuine earnings strength, but oil at $100-plus is keeping yields sticky and the Fed on hold — so it's a bull market with a real inflation ceiling on it, and that tension is worth watching heading into Friday's jobs report."
CEO Jensen Huang confirmed Nvidia's China market share has fallen to zero following export restrictions, erasing what was $19.67 billion in annual revenue from the region. All eyes are now on the May 20 Q1 earnings report to see whether U.S. government and data center demand can absorb the loss.