
- Moving the market
Stocks came under pressure right out of the gate as rising oil prices and climbing Treasury yields rattled investors.
The concern? Ongoing tensions between the U.S. and Iran could keep inflation elevated for longer than expected. Oil moved higher after both countries launched new strikes, with Kuwait reporting overnight that its air defense systems were intercepting “hostile targets.”
Adding to the drag, AI-related names—recent market darlings—took a breather. Nvidia slipped more than 2%, while Dell and Oracle dropped about 5.5%. Microsoft wasn’t spared either, losing around 2%. After such a strong run fueled by optimism and heavy investment in the AI cycle, a pause here isn’t all that surprising.
In fact, the timing makes sense. We’re moving past earnings season, which has been a major tailwind, so a bit of cooling off—or even some added volatility—feels natural as we head into the quieter summer months.
On the economic front, things are a bit mixed. Strong ADP jobs data and solid Services PMI pushed the U.S. Macro Surprise Index to its highest level since September 2023.
Normally that would lift sentiment, but instead it seemed to confuse traders. Yesterday’s bullish momentum quickly gave way to today’s reality of rising oil prices and higher bond yields.
The S&P 500’s 9-day winning streak came to an end, with all major indexes closing lower. Small caps led the decline, while the S&P held up relatively well. The “Mag 7” continues to struggle this week, significantly underperforming the broader S&P 493.
Elsewhere, bond yields spiked, and the dollar strengthened, putting pressure on gold, which slipped again. Bitcoin didn’t offer much refuge either, with sellers pushing it down toward key support levels as ETF outflows continue.
What we’re seeing looks like an extreme positioning shift—money chasing AI stocks while flowing out of gold and crypto, fueling pockets of speculation. The big question is: how long can that imbalance last before something gives?
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