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"Just Another Dip Investors Will Buy": Futures Drop, Oil Rises On Renewed Iran Tension
US futures whipsawed and crude oil spiked higher as tensions flared up again in the Middle East, taking the focus off a run of strong earnings by megacap tech companies. As of 8:00am ET, S&P and Nasdaq 100 futures dropped 0.2% from Friday's record highs, falling as much as 0.5% just minutes earlier after Iran’s Fars agency claimed two missiles hit an American patrol boat, before erasing most of the declines after the US denied a ship was hit. All of this after Trump said Sunday that US Navy will guide ships out of the Strait of Hormuz from Hormuz in a move called “Project Freedom" while Iran issued Trump a one-month deadline for negotiations on its proposed 14-point deal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz. European stocks were mostly red while tech-heavy Asia indexes in South Korea and Taiwan surged in Monday trading. In premarket trading, Mag 7 names are mixed: GOOGL (+0.6%), AMZN (+0.6%), and META (+0.7%) are outperforming, while AAPL and MSFT are lower. Brent crude surged more than 5% to trade above $113 a barrel before paring the gain, while bitcoin and gold traded in a mirror image. Interest rates are higher with the 10Y yield rising 4bps to 4.41%; WTI crude added ~$2 to $104 this morning having briefly traded above $107; base metals are higher, while gold and silver both sliding more than 2%. Looking at the US economic data calendar slate includes March factory orders at 10am. Fed speaker slate includes New York Fed President John Williams at 12:50pm
In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed (Alphabet +0.2%, Amazon -0.08%, Apple -0.4%, Nvidia -0.06%, Meta -0.09%, Microsoft -0.4%, Tesla +0.2%)
Cryptocurrency-linked stocks are rising in US premarket trading after Bitcoin climbed above $80,000 for the first time in more than three months, buoyed by renewed risk appetite in the stock market.
Celcuity (CELC) jumps 15% after its Phase 3 trial of gedatolisib plus fulvestrant in mutant breast cancer patients met its primary endpoint.
EBay Inc. (EBAY) gains 8% as GameStop Corp. is proposing to buy the e-commerce company for about $56 billion in cash and stock, a bold attempt by Ryan Cohen to take over a name several times larger. GameStop (GME) falls about 1%.
Global Business Travel Group (GBTG) gains 57% after Long Lake Management agreed to buy the company for $9.50 per share in an all-cash transaction valued at about $6.3 billion. Global Business Travel Group is a travel platform spun out of American Express.
Norwegian Cruise (NCLH) falls 7% after the cruise-line operator gave a forecast for second-quarter profit that missed expectations and slashed a full-year outlook. The war in Iran has driven up fuel costs and hurt demand, the company said.
In deals, GameStop proposed to buy eBay for about $56 billion in cash and stock, a bold attempt by Ryan Cohen to take over a storied e-commerce name several times larger. Some have wondered if Blockbuster or Circuit City would announce a hostile takeover of GameStop while it is buying eBay.
Iran moved to assert control over the Strait of Hormuz, a choke point for oil shipping, after President Donald Trump said the US would begin guiding ships not involved in the conflict through the waterway from Monday. The heightened tensions stalled a global stocks rally driven by optimism around the artificial intelligence trade and buoyant tech earnings. Sentiment was dented after Iran’s Fars agency claimed two missiles hit an American patrol boat, before erasing most of the declines after the US denied a ship was hit; the rapid recovery suggested the rally may not be over. Meanwhile, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte warned European leaders that Trump is disappointed with their reluctance to assist with the war.
“This is just another dip that investors will want to buy into,” said David Kruk, head of trading at La Financiere de l’Echiquier in Paris. “Yes, the news from Iran led to a spike in oil prices but we’re now used to those. Investors are very much focused on the surprisingly good earnings season we’ve had so far, on the AI trade.”
Elsewhere, the AI narrative has continued to capture attention and tech-heavy Asia indexes in South Korea and Taiwan surged in Monday trading. However, some investors are using the rally to book profits, with hedge fund sharply unwinding risk in technology stocks for a second straight week, according to Goldman's Prime Brokerage.
As Bloomberg notes, first-quarter earnings strength hasn’t been limited to megacap tech. It’s showing up across sectors. Small caps are on a tear, bank profits are booming and firms keep plowing past macroeconomic obstacles. The breadth of earnings revisions has even accelerated since the start of earnings season. The EPS surprise for the median S&P 500 stock in Q1 is 6%, the strongest in four years, according to Morgan Stanley's Michael Wilson.
Global stocks have been rising for more than a month as traders have set aside concerns about the economic fallout from the Middle East hostilities, with signs of corporate resilience driving US stocks to their best month since 2020. The proportion of companies missing analysts’ estimates is hovering at the lowest level since 2021 as earnings wind down for two-thirds of the stocks in the S&P 500 Index, which has posted five consecutive week of gains.
“We’ve gone from a market mainly driven by geopolitics to a market focused on earnings and these have been really positive across the board,” said Vincent Juvyns, chief investment strategist at ING in Brussels “Tech has been a driving force, but financial and energy stocks have also lifted indexes and earnings expectations.”
European shares slipped as carmakers fell following US President Donald Trump’s latest tariff threat. The Stoxx Europe 600 index declined about 0.5%, with the automobiles and parts sector down more than 1%. Mercedes-Benz Group AG dropped 2% and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG slid 1.9%. Trump said he would raise tariffs on European auto imports to 25%, adding to woes for the sector after a tepid earnings season. Here are the biggest movers Monday:
Nokia shares jump as much as 9% to their highest in 16 years as they play catch up with moves in the ADRs since Thursday’s European close
Umicore shares rise as much as 16%, the steepest gain in 11 months, after the Belgian materials technology group said it expects group adjusted Ebitda for FY2026 to approach €1 billion, significantly above estimates
Sinch gains as much as 20%, the most since July last year. The company, which sells cloud communication services, tracked gains in Twilio, which reported profit that beat analyst estimates and revenue growth forecasts
Sanofi falls as much as 2% after Morgan Stanley cut to equal-weight from overweight, saying that while recent 1Q numbers may provide scope for a 2Q guidance raise, the investment story otherwise remains “catalyst-light” with key pipeline drug trial readouts now expected in 2027
Earlier in the session, AI chipmakers helped Taiwanese and Korean stock benchmarks reach record highs, helping the MSCI Asia Pacific jump as much as 2.3% on Monday, the most since April 8, and rising to new record highs. Tech-heavy benchmarks in South Korea and Taiwan surged more than 4.5% each. The moves came after the S&P 500 Index extended a record-breaking streak Friday to mark a fifth week of gains, following solid earnings from tech mega caps. The AI theme — a dominant feature of markets before the outbreak of the Middle East conflict — has returned to the forefront as last month’s ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran calmed investor nerves. Asia’s benchmark surged more than 13% in April, erasing almost all of the declines suffered in March. It is up 15% so far this year. “Investors are moving past the initial shock from the Middle East tensions, with more joining the FOMO trade,” said Francis Tan, Asia chief strategist at Indosuez Wealth in Singapore. Shares of SK Hynix soared nearly 13% on Monday to a record, while TSMC’s jumped 6.6% to their all-time high. Samsung’s stock also jumped more than 5% to a record. Markets in mainland China and Japan were among those shut for holidays.
Markets like South Korea are currently performing well because of this AI-driven trade or hype, Dilin Wu, a research strategist at Pepperstone Group, said in a Bloomberg TV interview. “I would be cautiously optimistic on the Asian market in general,” as the geopolitical uncertainty and high oil prices may be a constraint to equities, she said.
Oil pared early declines, with WTI above $101.50, as traders remained skeptical about President Trump’s proposal to guide neutral ships through the Strait of Hormuz after the Wall Street Journal reported the plan didn’t currently involve Navy escorts. S&P 500 E‑mini futures rise 0.1%, while Nasdaq contracts gain 0.4%. In FX, the yen spiked higher earlier with USD/JPY now trading near 156.80. Traders remain on watch for further FX intervention amid thin liquidity with Japanese and UK markets closed. Gold was little changed, hovering near $4,610 an ounce. Bitcoin rose to a three-month high above $80,000. Treasury futures edged lower to around 110‑18, with cash Treasuries closed for the Japan holiday.
In FX, the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index erases a 0.2% drop and traded near session highs following a sharp escalation in Iran tensions; USD/JPY gained to trade near session highs of 157.10 falling as much as 0.8% to 155.72 following what is now a third failed intervention. Japanese Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama said the government’s stance has been clear, when asked whether the authorities remain ready to intervene in the currency market to prop up the yen. Katayama said “no comments” when asked if authorities intervened in the market on Monday.
In rates, treasuries are lower as oil prices rise amid heightened Middle East tensions after US President Donald Trump said the US would guide stranded ships through the Strait of Hormuz. US yields are 3bp-4bp cheaper across a flatter yield curve, tightening 2s10s and 5s30s spreads by 0.5bp and 1.5bp respectively. 10-year trades near session high, up 3.5bp to about 4.41%. IG dollar issuance slate includes one small deal so far. Dealers expect about $40 billion of supply this week and about $175 billion for the month. Bunds fell with shorter maturities underperforming; two-year yield rises 4bps to 2.68% as ECB policymaker Peter Kazimir says a June hike is “all but inevitable.” Treasury auctions resume next week with 3-, 10- and 30-year sales
In commodities, WTI crude oil futures are up more than 3%, as Iran moved to assert control over the Strait of Hormuz after President Donald Trump said the US would begin guiding ships not involved in the conflict through the waterway from Monday. Iran surged after Iran’s Fars agency claimed two missiles hit an American patrol boat, before erasing most of the declines after the US denied a ship was hit.
Looking at the US economic data calendar slate includes March factory orders at 10am. Fed speaker slate includes New York Fed President John Williams at 12:50pm
Market Snapshot
S&P 500 mini -0.2%
Nasdaq 100 mini -0.2%,
Russell 2000 mini -0.2%
Stoxx Europe 600 -0.2%
10-year Treasury yield 4.40%, +3bps
VIX +0.5 points at 17.5
Bloomberg Dollar Index little changed at 1,193.43
euro little changed at $1.1719
WTI crude +0.6% at $103.12/barrel
Top Overnight News
Oil jumped after Iran’s FARS news agency claimed that two missiles had hit a US warship that ignored warnings. Donald Trump had said that the US would begin guiding neutral ships through the Strait of Hormuz starting today. Iran warned the move would breach the ceasefire, Al Mayadeen reported. OPEC+ agreed to raise June quotas by 188,000 barrels a day, a symbolic increase with actual supply dependent on the reopening of Hormuz. BBG
Crew members from an Iranian ship seized by the US after trying to breach its military blockade last month have been transferred to Pakistan for repatriation, according to Pakistan’s foreign ministry. CNN
A sudden surge in the yen ensured traders remained on edge over the potential for Japanese authorities to step back into the market after last week’s intervention to curb declines: BBG
China ordered local companies to defy US sanctions for the first time, telling them to ignore restrictions on five domestic refiners linked to Iran’s oil trade. BBG
US senators propose an act on the China threat to strategic interests and the US Senators' China threat resolution is bipartisan.
Berkshire Hathaway’s cash pile surged to a record $397 billion, as operating earnings rose 18% in Greg Abel’s first quarter as CEO. The firm sold a net $8.1 billion of equities. BBG
The Bank of Korea's senior deputy governor said forward guidance on monetary policy would become more hawkish at the next meeting later this month, as it was time to consider interest rate hikes, according to pool reports shared by the central bank on Monday. RTRS
Russia has stepped up security protocols for President Vladimir Putin amid fears of assassination as he grows more isolated and absorbed by his war in Ukraine. FT
Global airlines have cut 2mn seats from their May schedules within the past two weeks, as concerns about fuel availability in the coming weeks intensify. Thousands of flights have been cancelled and several services have switched to smaller or more fuel-efficient aircraft to conserve fuel as they brace for supply disruption, according to data from analytics company Cirium. FT
GameStop offered to buy eBay for about $56 billion in cash and stock, targeting a company several times its size. EBay shares surged about 10% premarket but remained substantially below the offer price. BBG
Anthropic is nearing a deal to create a new joint venture that will sell AI tools to PE-backed companies. WSJ
Wednesday will amount to a sort of Groundhog Day for US bond dealers, who will — as has been the case for more than a year now — be watching for any change in guidance from the Treasury in its latest plan for debt issuance: BBG
Australia’s central bank is set to entrench its status as a hawkish outlier with a third straight interest-rate hike, diverging from peers that are mainly sitting tight to observe fallout from the US-Iran conflict: BBG
South Korea’s largest pension fund removed its cap on currency hedging last month, allowing it to exercise more heft in the foreign exchange market at a time of won weakness: BBG
A more detailed look at global markets courtesy of Newsquawk
APAC stocks traded mostly firmer, although thinner liquidity prevailed amid the absence of Japanese and Mainland Chinese markets. ASX 200 trimmed early gains but remained rangebound ahead of the RBA decision, where a 25bps hike is expected. KOSPI surged at the open, with chip giants leading the market higher, SK Hynix +10%, Samsung Electronics +3.5%. Hang Seng opened higher, supported by tech strength, albeit Northbound and Southbound Stock Connect trading were closed due to the Labour Day holiday in Mainland China.
Top Asian News
Indian HSBC Manufacturing PMI Final (Apr) 54.7 vs. Exp. 55.9 (Prev. 53.9).
Australian Building Permits YoY Prel (Mar) Y/Y 9.0% (Prev. 14.0%).
Australian ANZ-Indeed Job Ads MoM (Apr) M/M -0.8% (Prev. -3.1%).
Australian Private House Approvals MoM Prel (Mar) M/M 12% (Prev. 0.2%).
Australian Building Permits MoM Prel (Mar) M/M -10.5% (Prev. 29.7%).
Australian TD-MI Inflation Gauge (Apr) M/M 0.6% (Prev. 1.3%); Y/Y 4.3% (Prev. 4.3%).
European bourses (STOXX 600 -0.2%) opened tentatively on either side of the unchanged mark, and have gradually moved lower, alongside a pick-up in energy prices. The DAX 40 (+0.3%) is the outperforming major this morning, whilst the IBEX 35 (-1%) lags vs peers. As a reminder, the FTSE 100 is closed on account of the UK’s May Bank Holiday. The focus this morning has been on a) geopols and b) trade. (See geopolitical section above for details). On the trade front, Trump threatened the EU with 25% tariffs on European cars and truck imports, after suggesting that the bloc is not complying with the trade deal. The White House said that it would implement the tariffs through Section 232, which are typically subject to long due process/probes. The Autos sector in Europe this morning has been mildly hit following Trump’s threat, with the likes of BMW (-1.3%) and Mercedes (-1.2%) on the backfoot, whilst Stellantis (-0.1%) remains fairly resilient. The divergence is explained by BMW/Mercedes importing many of their cars into the US through European factories, whilst Stellantis has a higher industrial presence within the region. European sectors are mixed. Media and Tech take the top two spots, whilst Autos and Media are the clear laggards. The Tech sector gains follow the strength seen in APAC trade overnight, whereby SK Hynix shares rallied 12%, as the sector reacted to continued optimism surrounding strong spending for AI data centres.
Top European News
Some Labour MPs said it was imperative that Chancellor Rachel Reeves stayed in post to reassure markets even if there was a change of leadership. Labour MPs feared bond market chaos if Rachel Reeves was ousted alongside UK PM Starmer, according to The Sunday Times. Reeves and Starmer are expected to come under pressure if local elections go as badly as feared.
Wes Streeting had the backing of enough Labour MPs to launch a leadership challenge within days, according to The Telegraph. He had reportedly recruited more than 81 MPs, the minimum needed to trigger a challenge. UK PM Starmer was alerted to Streeting’s plans after a Downing Street staffer accidentally texted details. Some Streeting supporters want him to strike as soon as the Friday after the local elections, according to The Telegraph.
PM Starmer loyalists on Labour’s ruling body are no longer prepared to block Andy Burnham’s return to Parliament, according to The Telegraph.
Cabinet allies of UK PM Starmer have reportedly urged Labour MPs to back the PM and avoid a leadership contest, FT reported.
Wes Streeting is ready to launch leadership challenge against Starmer, The Telegraph reported; he has recruited enough MPs to trigger a contest, with supporters calling for him to strike after local elections next week.Andy Burnham has a plan to return to Westminster 'within weeks', according to the Guardian, citing allies.
ECB's Kazimir said policy tightening in June is all but inevitable. Europe is increasingly likely to face a prolonged period of broad-based price increases, with higher energy prices set to spread to the rest of the economy.
ECB's Simkus said it is clear that they have deviated from the baseline scenario.
ECB Survey of Professional Forecasters (Q2'26): Headline and core HICP inflation revised up in the near term, while remaining unchanged further out. Headline and core HICP inflation revised up in the near term, while remaining unchanged further out. Real GDP growth expectations revised down for 2026 and 2027, but unchanged thereafter. Unemployment rate expectations unchanged.
ECB's Villeroy said they are facing an unprecedented shock. Expects France to have a deficit of 5% of GDP, should avoid a recession.
ECB's Muller said ECB rate is at more-or-less neutral level and allows time to wait.
ECB Wunsch FT interview: "Europe ‘naive’ in clinging to old economic model".
RBNZ Board Member Gai said supply shocks such as the Hormuz situation have raised the neutral rate.
BoK Deputy Governor said it is time to think about a rate hike, Yonhap reported; cites more resilient growth and higher inflation than expected.
US Event Calendar
10:00 am: United States Mar Factory Orders, est. 0.59%, prior 0%
10:00 am: United States Mar F Durable Goods Orders, est. 0.8%, prior 0.8%
10:00 am: United States Mar F Durables Ex Transportation, est. 0.9%, prior 0.9%
Tyler Durden
Mon, 05/04/2026 - 08:39
حوار AI
أربعة نماذج AI رائدة تناقش هذا المقال
"The market's persistent 'buy the dip' behavior is ignoring the second-order inflationary risks of a sustained energy supply shock in the Strait of Hormuz."
The market is currently pricing in a 'Goldilocks' scenario where geopolitical friction in the Strait of Hormuz is treated as a transient supply-side noise rather than a structural threat to global growth. While earnings breadth is undeniably strong, the reliance on an AI-driven multiple expansion is vulnerable. We are seeing a dangerous divergence: energy prices are surging, yet equity risk premiums remain compressed at levels that assume geopolitical stability. If the 'Project Freedom' escort initiative leads to even a minor kinetic engagement, the current 'buy the dip' mentality will evaporate, as the market is not currently discounting a sustained $110+ Brent environment or the resulting inflationary impulse on consumer discretionary spending.
The market may be correctly identifying that US energy independence and the strategic pivot to AI productivity gains provide a sufficient buffer to absorb higher oil prices without collapsing corporate margins.
"Hormuz tensions risk a sustained oil shock that turns 'buy the dip' into stagflation trap, overriding earnings momentum."
Futures' quick recovery masks a real tail risk: Strait of Hormuz handles ~20% of global oil seaborne trade, and Iran's missile claim plus one-month negotiation deadline signal potential blockade escalation beyond the article's 'used to it' dismissal. WTI at $103+ (up 3% intraday) with a credible Hormuz disruption scenario doesn't just spike crude—it compresses margins across discretionary sectors and forces Fed to hold rates higher longer. The article glosses over depth-of-cycle risks: USD/global growth exposure, currency volatility (yen swings and FX interventions), and the risk that AI-driven upside is peaking. A blowout in oil or a broader conflict could break the momentum.
Strong Q1 earnings across sectors (lowest misses since 2021) and AI-fueled Asia surges (SK Hynix +13%, TSMC ATH) show corporate resilience overwhelming geo noise, as markets did post-ceasefire.
"Strong earnings are being used to justify holding through a geopolitical risk that has not been priced into equity valuations, while hedge funds are already rotating out of the very tech names driving the rally."
The article frames this as 'just another dip to buy'—but that's the consensus trap. Yes, earnings breadth is genuinely strong (6% EPS surprise, best in 4 years per Morgan Stanley), and that's real. But the article buries the actual risk: oil at $104+ WTI with a credible Hormuz disruption scenario doesn't just spike crude—it compresses margins on airlines, shipping, discretionary retail before supply adjusts. Earnings breadth today doesn't survive a 60-day oil shock.
If the Hormuz threat proves hollow (as the rapid equity recovery suggests traders already believe), and if the Fed can thread the needle on inflation without rate hikes, then the earnings momentum genuinely does carry the market higher—the 5-week S&P 500 rally has real earnings substance, not just sentiment.
"The combination of energy-driven inflation and yen volatility will force a structural liquidation of over-leveraged tech positions."
The combination of energy-driven inflation and yen volatility will force a structural liquidation of over-leveraged tech positions.
Claude, your mention of the GameStop-eBay deal is a critical red flag, but it's a symptom of a deeper liquidity trap. While everyone focuses on oil, the real risk is the 'carry trade' unwind. If the Fed holds rates high to combat energy-driven inflation, the yen’s volatility will force further repatriation of capital from US equities. We aren't just looking at a supply shock; we are looking at a forced liquidation of the very tech positions currently propping up the S&P 500.
"GameStop-eBay deal is invented; US shale supply relief is too slow to matter if Hormuz disruption is acute."
Claude and Gemini, that GameStop–eBay $56B deal is fabricated—no filings, no news confirms it; pure hallucination distracting from real risks. Flaw in the euphoria narrative: ignores US shale's 1-2MM bbl/d ramp-up capacity (EIA data) within months, capping Hormuz disruption at transient $10-15/bbl premium. Markets correctly price earnings breadth over unverified memes.
"US shale supply relief is too slow to matter if Hormuz disruption is acute."
Grok's right to call out the GameStop fabrication—that’s a critical credibility check. But the shale ramp-up argument underestimates geopolitical tail risk. EIA capacity takes 6-12 months to deploy; a Hormuz blockade is immediate. The real issue: even a *transient* $10-15/bbl premium forces Q2-Q3 margin compression on airlines, shipping, discretionary retail before supply adjusts. Earnings breadth today doesn't survive a 60-day oil shock.
"Liquidity dynamics—carry unwinds and yen-driven repatriation—could trigger a growth-name repricing more damaging than oil spikes if rates stay high."
Grok, labeling a rumored GameStop–eBay $56B deal as fabrication is a credibility trap—treat rumors as rumors, but don’t let them derail the real risk. The bigger miss is assuming Hormuz disruption is marginal because shale can ramp quickly. If rates stay high, carry-trade unwind and yen-driven repatriation could trigger a liquidity-led repricing of growth names, potentially more damaging than oil spikes alone. Watch for liquidity dynamics, not memes.
"A sustained energy shock and geopolitical escalation that lifts inflation and forces the Fed to tilt hawkish again, potentially ending the earnings-led rally."
The panel consensus is bearish, warning of a potential market correction due to geopolitical risks in the Strait of Hormuz, which could lead to sustained high oil prices, inflation, and forced liquidation of tech positions propping up the S&P 500.
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