Markets are running on one fuel right now: Iran peace optimism. A U.S. one-page framework sent through Pakistani mediators has Iran evaluating terms, and every headline nudging toward a Strait of Hormuz reopening sends oil lower and stocks higher. The 10-year yield is cooperating — down as inflation risk fades — and Q1 earnings are holding up their end of the bargain with double-digit S&P 500 profit growth keeping bulls firmly in control.
The White House sent Iran a one-page memorandum of understanding through Pakistani mediators outlining terms to end the ~10-week war, including a moratorium on nuclear enrichment. Iran confirmed it is reviewing the proposal and is expected to respond to mediators as soon as today. That single headline wiped nearly 13% off WTI crude in Wednesday's session — the biggest single-day drop since the conflict began in February — while the S&P 500 hit its first-ever close above 7,300, up 1.46%. Markets are pricing in a peaceful outcome, and every tick lower in oil is a tailwind for both equities and the inflation picture.
Datadog (DDOG) is the earnings story of the week. The cloud monitoring company beat both top and bottom lines on Thursday and raised its full-year revenue outlook to $4.30–$4.34 billion, well above the $4.09 billion analysts had penciled in — up 32% year over year in the quarter. Management cited AI as a leading new growth driver on top of its existing cloud migration tailwind, and even disclosed signing an eight-figure deal with an unnamed top tech company's AI research division. Shares surged more than 30%, the stock's largest single-day gain in six years. This is exactly what the market needed to see: AI spending translating into real, measurable revenue for software companies, not just chipmakers.
Arm Holdings (ARM) beat earnings expectations but cratered roughly 7% after management disclosed it has not yet secured enough chip supply capacity to meet an additional $1 billion in demand tied to its new AGI CPU. The company also guided for flat-to-slightly-negative mobile market unit growth in fiscal year 2027. This is a classic "great product, wrong bottleneck" story — AGI CPU demand is real, but the physical supply chain can't keep pace. For finance students, ARM is a textbook case of why guidance and forward visibility matter more to markets than a backward-looking earnings beat.
McDonald's (MCD) posted a Q1 earnings beat as consumers under pressure from elevated gas prices and a stretched economic backdrop continued trading down to value-oriented fast food. Shares climbed 3.3% on the results. Global same-store sales grew 3.8%, slightly below consensus but still positive — a meaningful signal that the lower-income consumer, while stressed, hasn't fully retrenched. With gas averaging $4.46 nationally and climbing above $6 in California, the fact that MCD is growing comps at all is a resilience story worth tracking through the rest of earnings season.
Today's session is a live stress test of a single thesis: can peace talks with Iran structurally reduce oil prices, cool inflation, and give the Fed room to stay on hold — or eventually cut? Every positive Iran headline pulls yields down, lifts equities, and tightens credit spreads. The market is not waiting for a signed deal; it's front-running one, which means the downside risk if talks collapse is asymmetric and sharp.
The bull case requires Iran to actually accept the U.S. framework. But Trump himself warned it would be a "big assumption" that Iran agrees, and he threatened to resume military strikes if it doesn't comply. Meanwhile, ~23,000 seafarers remain stranded in the Persian Gulf, and Goldman Sachs warns global refined product inventories could fall to 98 days of demand by end of May — meaning even a deal won't normalize supply flows immediately. Stocks are priced for resolution; the reality is still fluid.
The 10-year Treasury yield eased to 4.34%, down 2 bps from Wednesday and about 10 bps below Monday's nine-month high of ~4.44%, as oil's collapse removed the war-premium from inflation expectations. The Fed is still on hold — hawkish FOMC members have been backed by recent robust ADP data and elevated ISM inflation — but a sustained drop in energy prices changes that calculus meaningfully. Watch Friday's jobs report as the next real test for where yields go.
The S&P 500 is on track for its sixth record close in recent sessions, now up well above where it started 2026 despite the U.S.-Iran war kicking off in late February. Wednesday's 1.46% surge to 7,365 was powered by semiconductors (AMD +18%, Supermicro +24.5%), industrials, and Iran-relief optimism. Tech and communication services are leading again Thursday. The Russell 2000 small-cap index also hit a record Wednesday, up 1.52% to 2,888, signaling the rally is broadening beyond mega-cap names.
Initial jobless claims came in at 200,000 for the week ended May 2 — up 10,000 from the prior week but below the 205,000 consensus estimate, signaling a still-tight labor market. Challenger data showed April job cut announcements jumped 38% from March, with AI-driven layoffs hitting tech hardest. S&P 500 Q1 earnings are on track for double-digit growth despite the war backdrop. California gas prices have crossed $6 per gallon, up roughly 30% since the conflict began — a real pressure point for lower-income households.
Iran's response to the U.S. one-page peace framework — yes or no shapes everything from oil to yields to Fed policy this month Iran's formal response to the U.S. peace framework via Pakistani mediators — the single biggest market-moving event of the week Friday's April jobs report — the last major labor data before the next FOMC meeting, critical for rate-cut timing bets Coinbase (COIN) earnings after the close — crypto sentiment plus a potential U.S. Bitcoin Reserve update within weeks
Iran's formal response to the U.S. peace framework via Pakistani mediators — the single biggest market-moving event of the week · Friday's April jobs report — the last major labor data before the next FOMC meeting, critical for rate-cut timing bets · Coinbase (COIN) earnings after the close — crypto sentiment plus a potential U.S. Bitcoin Reserve update within weeks
Tech is the engine of this bull run. Datadog's 30%+ surge, AMD's 18% post-earnings pop, Supermicro's 24.5% jump, and Nvidia's continued grind higher all confirm that AI infrastructure spending is converting into real revenue. The semiconductor index has gone near-parabolic. For finance students: watch how AI-linked software names like DDOG now trade at growth premiums that rival the best hardware plays — that multiple expansion story is the core portfolio debate right now.
Energy is the biggest loser from Iran peace optimism. The S&P 500 Energy sector fell over 4% on Wednesday as WTI plunged, reversing weeks of war-premium gains. U.S. oil exports hit a record high last week as countries scrambled for supply alternatives, and the SPR has been drawn down aggressively to keep prices from hitting three digits. If a deal materializes, energy equities face a sustained de-rating — but if talks collapse, they snap back violently.
McDonald's beating comps and Uber and Disney both flagging resilient consumer spending last week suggest the U.S. consumer is bending but not breaking — for now. Higher-income households are barely changing behavior despite $6 gas, per NY Fed research. Lower-income households are cutting consumption, not just spending more. That divergence matters for modeling consumer sectors: luxury and QSR are holding up; mid-market discretionary faces real pressure if gas stays elevated.
Industrials were a standout on Wednesday, with 63 of 73 S&P 500 industrial holdings closing in the green. Nvidia's partnership with Corning for three new advanced U.S. manufacturing facilities — boosting optical capacity 10-fold and creating 3,000+ jobs — is a signal that domestic manufacturing buildout tied to AI infrastructure is real and ongoing. This sector benefits from both a peace deal (lower input costs, logistics normalization) and continued AI capex from hyperscalers.
The market is doing something specific right now: it's pricing in a best-case scenario for the Iran conflict before the deal is signed. That's rational — markets are forward-looking — but it also means the downside is underpriced. If you're in an interview or coffee chat this week, the smart framing is: "The market is trading the probability of peace, not the reality of it — and the spread between those two things is where the risk lives."
Iran peace trade reshapes client portfolio positioning across asset classes Wealth managers are navigating a fast-moving reallocation: oil's drop benefits fixed income (yields falling) and growth equities while punishing energy overweights. HNW clients who added energy exposure as an inflation hedge during the war now face a drawdown if the deal closes. The right conversation is about rebalancing — trimming energy, revisiting duration on the bond side as yield pressure eases, and evaluating whether tech's multiple expansion has outrun near-term earnings visibility. The war also created a K-shaped consumer dynamic: lower-income clients feel $6 gas acutely; affluent clients are still spending freely, a key input for equity positioning in consumer and travel names.
Geopolitical resolution unlocks dealmaking — watch the M&A calendar accelerate The U.S.-Iran war created a freeze in large cross-border M&A and IPO activity, with energy price uncertainty making DCF modeling and deal pricing unreliable. If a peace deal materializes and oil stabilizes, expect the pipeline to reopen quickly — Johnson Associates already projects M&A and IPO bankers will see compensation jump up to 20% in 2026. In your next coffee chat, flag that you've been tracking how geopolitical risk premiums compress M&A multiples and what sectors are most likely to see deal activity resume first (energy infrastructure, logistics, industrials).
ARM vs. DDOG earnings teach the most important lesson in research: guidance beats history ARM beat earnings but fell 7%; Datadog beat and surged 30%. The difference? Datadog raised forward guidance and showed AI monetization; ARM spooked investors with a supply constraint that caps future revenue. As an equity research analyst, your job isn't to report what happened — it's to model what comes next. Study how analysts revised price targets on both stocks today. That's the research process in real time: earnings print, guidance drops, model updates, target changes, rating shifts. Practice building a simple update to a DDOG or ARM model this week.
Oil-yield-inflation linkage is the cleanest macro trade of 2026 — know it cold The 10-year yield has dropped ~10 bps in two days purely because oil collapsed on Iran peace hopes, reducing the inflation premium embedded in Treasuries. This is a live demonstration of the oil → CPI → Fed expectations → yield curve transmission mechanism that macro desks trade daily. If you're interviewing for a rates desk, macro hedge fund, or global markets role, be ready to walk through this chain: oil price shock (war) → energy CPI surge → Fed hawkish tilt → yield spike → peace deal → oil down → disinflation → yield compression → duration rally. That's the entire trade in one sentence.
A non-binding agreement outlining the framework and intent of parties before a formal contract — in today's context, the one-page U.S.-Iran document setting terms to pause the war and pave the way for nuclear negotiations, which markets are treating as a near-done deal even though it isn't signed.
"The market right now is essentially trading a probability-weighted Iran peace deal — every positive headline compresses the war risk premium in oil, which flows directly into lower inflation expectations, lower Treasury yields, and higher equity multiples, so you're watching geopolitics drive the entire asset allocation picture in real time."
SEC Chair Paul Atkins introduced a proposal this week allowing public companies to file a Form 10-S every six months instead of the traditional quarterly 10-Q, effectively cutting earnings disclosure frequency in half. Citi strategist Scott Chronert warned this could make stocks more sensitive to macro data and less anchored to company fundamentals — a structural shift worth tracking if you plan to work in equity research, IR, or public markets.