
- Moving the market
Stocks pushed higher early after President Trump announced an extension of the U.S. ceasefire with Iran, and a solid batch of earnings reports helped keep sentiment upbeat.
The move gave markets a sense of breathing room, even if the situation remains far from resolved.
Shortly after Tuesday’s close, Trump said he would extend the ceasefire, citing Iran’s “seriously fractured” government as a reason to allow more time for negotiations.
At the same time, he emphasized that the U.S. military would maintain its blockade and remain fully prepared should talks fail. In other words, diplomacy stays on the table—but the pressure hasn’t gone anywhere.
That said, the timeline still looks shaky. Reports suggest Vice President JD Vance paused plans to join peace talks after Tehran failed to show meaningful commitment. Iranian state media added to the uncertainty, quoting negotiators who dismissed talks with the U.S. as a “waste of time.”
So yes, the jawboning continues, and likely will for a while. Still, markets seem to be focusing on the broader takeaway: despite the noise, the path appears more de‑escalatory than not.
Beyond geopolitics, earnings season is doing a lot of the heavy lifting. Boeing shares climbed more than 4% after reporting a smaller‑than‑expected first‑quarter loss, while GE Vernova jumped 10% on stronger‑than‑expected revenue.
So far, more than 80% of S&P 500 companies that have reported have beaten expectations—a strong start by any measure.
By the close, tech was once again in the driver’s seat, pushing both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to fresh record highs. Rising oil prices were largely shrugged off, as confidence in earnings outweighed concerns about narrow market breadth.
The Magnificent Seven handily outperformed the rest of the index, moving back into the green for the week.
Bond yields were mixed, the dollar strengthened, gold posted modest gains, and Bitcoin continued to march higher, breaking above $79,000 for the first time since February 2.
As ZeroHedge put it, if markets believe a resolution is likely in the coming months, even meaningful near‑term economic damage may not derail equities or other long‑duration assets.
The real question is: how long can that conviction hold if progress on the diplomatic front continues to stall?
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