
- Moving the market
Stocks opened sharply lower after President Trump announced that the U.S. was reinstating what he described as a blockade on Iranian shipping in the Strait of Hormuz, sending oil prices soaring.
In a series of posts on Truth Social, Trump said the U.S. would act as the “Guardian of the Hormuz Strait” and proposed a 20% fee on cargo shipments to cover the costs of securing the critical shipping lane.
The latest escalation follows a weekend of military exchanges between the U.S. and Iran.
While Tehran claimed it had closed the Strait of Hormuz after targeting U.S. facilities in several Gulf countries, Trump pushed back on that assertion, maintaining that commercial traffic through the waterway remains open.
For now, the market appears stuck in a trading range as investors wait for greater clarity from the Middle East. Semiconductor stocks took a heavy hit, dragging the broader tech sector lower, while bank shares also came under pressure ahead of earnings season.
Not surprisingly, the Nasdaq was the weakest of the major U.S. indexes, breaking below its 50-day moving average once again.
Meanwhile, bond yields moved higher as investors positioned themselves ahead of tomorrow’s closely watched CPI report.
The dollar initially sold off but quickly reversed higher, putting pressure on both gold and Bitcoin.
Gold managed to hold above the $4,000 level by the close, while Bitcoin slipped back toward $62,000. Rising expectations for additional rate hikes further dampened enthusiasm for precious metals and cryptocurrencies.
The recent rotation out of technology stocks remains one of the market’s key themes.
The big question now is whether this is simply a temporary shift in leadership before money flows back into growth stocks—or the early stages of a more cautious and bearish market environment.
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