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OPTIMISM WINS THE DAY AS TECH AND INTEL STEAL THE SHOW

- Moving the market
The tech sector led the way this morning after traders got a hopeful signal that peace talks between the U.S. and Iran could soon take place in Pakistan.
Reports cited a Pakistani government official saying Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi is expected to arrive in Islamabad on Friday evening, raising expectations that negotiations between the two sides may follow.
Oil prices, which had been rallying, lost some steam on the news.
That optimism comes on the heels of President Trump’s announcement Thursday that Israel and Lebanon agreed to extend their ceasefire by another three weeks, following meetings at the White House with senior U.S. officials.
Taken together, the headlines reinforced the idea—at least for now—that tensions may be cooling rather than escalating.
Given Thursday’s pullback from all‑time highs in both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, Middle East developments are clearly still capable of moving markets. Even so, traders are trying to look past the geopolitical noise and refocus on corporate earnings.
Today, optimism won out. Stocks surged to fresh record highs as markets latched onto a new wave of “promising” headlines from the U.S., largely brushing aside Iran’s more cautious responses.
Earnings also played a major role. Intel delivered a blowout report, sending its stock up as much as 28% at one point—the biggest one‑day move since Black Monday in 1987—before settling back to a still‑impressive 21% gain. Along the way, Intel surpassed its prior record high from the peak of the dot‑com bubble.
In other markets, bond yields fell after a Justice Department decision involving Powell appeared to clear a path for Kevin Warsh to become the next Fed chair, prompting traders to boost bets on future rate cuts.
Gold and silver ETFs moved modestly higher, while copper and Bitcoin largely treaded water.
With Middle East headlines still in play and next week shaping up as the busiest stretch of earnings season—with 36% of the S&P 500 reporting—traders now face a familiar question:
Can strong earnings and hopes of de‑escalation keep this rally going, or are markets getting ahead of themselves?
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