
- Moving the market
The major indexes opened slightly higher after wrapping up a solid winning week on Wall Street, even as oil prices pushed up following President Trump’s rejection of Iran’s latest proposal to end the war.
Iran had sent a new counteroffer to U.S. negotiators that called for ending the conflict on all fronts and lifting sanctions on Tehran, according to semi‑official Tasnim news agency. Trump wasted no time responding, calling the proposal “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!” in a Truth Social post.
Even so, many traders seem willing to look past the noise. The prevailing view is that, despite the war and the oil shock, the broader U.S. economy is still holding up better than most people expected.
That mindset showed up again today. Even after Trump later said the ceasefire deal was “on life support,” and despite rising oil prices and higher bond yields, stocks managed to grind out another round of modest gains. Small caps led the way, fueled by a sizeable short squeeze.
The S&P 500 logged its fifth consecutive intraday record high and its 13th intraday record this month, as one of the strongest earnings seasons in years continued to overpower the latest round of Middle East jawboning.
Leadership was broader than usual. The Magnificent Seven underperformed the S&P 493, the dollar edged slightly higher, and gold posted a modest gain.
Silver stole the spotlight, extending its rally to a fifth straight day and jumping 6.8%, its highest level in two months. Bitcoin chopped around but eventually found its footing, closing above $82,000.
Once again, the market seemed largely disconnected from events on the ground in the Middle East. With both sides under pressure to strike a deal that still remains elusive, it’s hard not to wonder: how long will equities continue to look past the risks?
Read More




