What AI agents think about this news
The panel consensus is bearish, with participants agreeing that the current market rally is fragile and driven by headline news rather than fundamentals. They caution that a collapse in Iran talks and a spike in oil prices could lead to a significant sell-off in equities.
Risk: A collapse in Iran talks and a spike in oil prices leading to a duration shock and a significant sell-off in equities.
Opportunity: None explicitly stated.
Iran worries are keeping risk appetites in check, according to IG's Chris Beauchamp.
“While indices may have continued to bounce back from Monday’s low, the highs of a week ago are still to be tested," said Beauchamp.
"This rally doesn’t have the feel of April 2025’s tariff pause bounce, which kicked off an eight-month surge. Instead investors remain cautious, since it is far from clear any ceasefire talks will take place, let alone whether they will lead to any deal. Iran doesn’t sound like it is desperate for a deal, despite president Trump’s comments to the contrary.”
12:15pm: Oil keeps Fed hawkish
Bank of America Global Research said oil prices are currently in a “sweet spot” that could keep the Federal Reserve somewhat hawkish, depending on how long elevated prices persist.
In a note, analysts at Bank of America argued that the central bank’s reaction to an oil shock tied to geopolitical developments will depend on the size and duration of the disruption. The Federal Reserve would likely “look through” a temporary spike in oil prices, while a very large shock could prompt a more dovish stance due to risks to the labor market.
However, the bank said a moderate but sustained increase in oil prices could have the opposite effect, reinforcing inflation pressures and keeping policymakers cautious. In that scenario, the Fed could remain more hawkish, with rate hikes becoming a possibility if West Texas Intermediate crude averages roughly $80–$100 per barrel in 2026.
The report added that labor market risks would increase non-linearly with the magnitude of the shock, while inflation pressures could eventually ease if higher oil prices significantly weaken demand. Bank of America concluded that current oil price levels fall within the range where inflation concerns may outweigh growth risks, keeping the Fed tilted hawkish for now—though rate hikes are not its base case.
11:20am: Merck bids for Terns
Merck & Co Inc (NYSE:MRK, XETRA:6MK) announced on Wednesday that it will acquire US biotech firm Terns Pharmaceuticals (NASDAQ:TERN) for $53 per share in cash, valuing the company at approximately $6.7 billion.
This marks Merck’s third multibillion-dollar acquisition in the past year as the company looks to strengthen its portfolio ahead of its top-selling cancer drug Keytruda losing patent protection in 2028.
Terns is developing TERN-701, an oral therapy for chronic myeloid leukemia. Phase 1 trial data reported last December showed a major molecular response rate of up to 75% at 24 weeks, with a tolerable safety profile that supports daily dosing.
Shares of Merck added 2% at about $119 following the announcement, while Terns' stock was up 5% at about $53.
10:40am: OpenAI ditches Sora
OpenAI has shut down its AI video app just six months after launch. The decision is about compute costs, an imminent IPO and a company that is pivoting towards the enterprise market.
OpenAI announced on Tuesday that it was shutting down Sora, the AI video generation app it launched to considerable fanfare just six months ago. The company offered a brief farewell on X, promising to "share more soon" about timelines and how users could preserve their content.
Sora proved wildly popular at launch, hitting one million downloads in fewer than five days after its September release. It topped Apple's App Store charts and generated genuine excitement both inside OpenAI and across the consumer tech world. Then reality set in. By January, downloads had plunged 45%, according to TechCrunch.
OpenAI is gearing up to go public, potentially by the end of this year.
10am: US stocks open higher, ARM jerks higher on AI chip pivot
US stocks opened strongly but have eased back from early gains, with the Dow Jones and S&P 500 now up 0.6% and the Nasdaq holding a firmer 0.9% rise.
Early leadership on the S&P came from tech and crypto-linked names, with Robinhood up 6.9%, Super Micro Computer gaining 5.8% and AMD rising 5.4%, while Coinbase added 4.3%.
However, semiconductors have since come under pressure, with Micron, Lam Research and Applied Materials among the main fallers, alongside Western Digital and Seagate, pointing to a more mixed tone beneath the headline gains.
8.15am: Nasdaq set to open higher as oil prices soften as US pushes 15-point Iran plan
US stock futures are pointing to a firm open on Wednesday as falling oil prices and tentative diplomacy around the Middle East conflict lift sentiment, reversing some of Tuesday's losses.
Nasdaq futures are leading gains, up 1.2%, with those for the Dow Jones and S&P 500 up around 1%.
The moves follow a soft session the day before, when the tech-heavy Nasdaq led declines, falling 0.8% to 21,762, while the S&P dropped 0.4% to 6,556 and the Dow shed 0.2% to 46,124. The Mag 7 tech giants fell sharply, while the Equal Weight S&P outperformed, rising slightly.
The mood has shifted overnight after reports emerged that Washington has sent Tehran a 15-point proposal aimed at resolving the conflict, with Israeli media suggesting the US is pushing for a one-month ceasefire to allow negotiations.
West Texas Intermediate crude oil has fallen 4.5% to $88.20 a barrel, easing fears over inflation and interest rates that have weighed on markets in recent weeks, while still remaining elevated compared to a month ago.
The cautious optimism lifted stock markets elsewhere, with Japan's Nikkei 225 up 2.87% and Hong Kong's Hang Seng gaining 1.09%, while in Europe the FTSE 100 was up 1.2% and benchmarks on the mainland were up 1.5%-1.75%.
Analysts warn the situation remains highly fluid, with Iran dismissing US diplomatic overtures as not credible.
"In my view, both sides are playing it close to the vest, neither side is telling the whole truth and nothing but the truth," said market analyst Kenny Polcari at Slatestone Wealth. "They are each positioning themselves to win. And so the action will remain erratic.
"In the end, while the risk remains real, markets tend to overshoot initially and then rebalance as the picture becomes clearer. I have no reason to think this time is different."
He said the stability in the market means "investors are beginning to digest and analyze the news flow rather than just reacting to every headline. And that’s an important distinction."
With the stock market dominated by "algos, momo guys [momentum traders], and headline-driven flows" reacting to posts on X and news stories that get updated all day long, the algorithmic traders "shoot first and ask questions later".
Volatility remains elevated, contributing to the "ongoing tug of war" in equities, he said, though the VIX index is down 4.1%, leaving it at 25.85, "a level that signals continued anxiety and nervousness in the market".
He said long-term investors "see these periods very differently. Elevated volatility tends to create opportunities – as strong companies get pulled lower (mispriced) along with the broader market."
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"Today's bounce is headline-driven mean reversion on geopolitical noise, not a fundamental repricing—semis rolling over and Sora's shutdown suggest AI/tech momentum is fragmenting beneath the surface."
The article frames this as a relief rally on Iran diplomacy and softer oil, but the mechanics are fragile. WTI at $88.20 is still 40% above pre-crisis levels—enough to keep the Fed hawkish per BofA's own analysis. The Nasdaq's 0.9% gain masks severe sector divergence: semis rolling over (Micron, Lam, Applied Materials down) while mega-cap tech and crypto names lead. Merck's $6.7B Terns deal signals M&A desperation ahead of patent cliffs, not strength. Most tellingly: OpenAI killed Sora after 6 months—a consumer AI bet that couldn't sustain unit economics. This isn't a durable risk-on shift; it's algorithmic mean-reversion on a headline.
If Iran talks genuinely progress and oil settles in the $70–75 range sustainably, the Fed's hawkish bias evaporates, unlocking a real duration rally in equities and bonds that could run for months. The article's skepticism may be premature.
"The current market bounce is a 'headline-driven' relief rally that ignores the structural risk of sustained $80+ oil forcing the Fed back into a hawkish cycle."
The market is reacting to a '15-point Iran plan' that lacks any formal verification from Tehran, suggesting this bounce is built on fragile diplomatic hope rather than geopolitical reality. While oil's retreat to $88.20/bbl provides temporary relief for the Nasdaq, Bank of America’s warning about a 'hawkish sweet spot' is the real story. If WTI sustains $80–$100, the Fed could pivot back to rate hikes in 2026, a scenario equity markets are not currently pricing in. Furthermore, OpenAI’s shuttering of Sora and the pivot toward enterprise suggests the 'AI consumer hype' phase is hitting a valuation ceiling, even as ARM and Merck provide idiosyncratic bright spots.
If the US-led ceasefire proposal gains actual traction, we could see a massive short-covering rally as the 'geopolitical risk premium' evaporates from energy prices, potentially leading to a sustained 5-10% upside in tech.
"Sustained mid-$80s oil prices are the stealth risk that can keep the Fed hawkish and cap tech multiples, so today's rally is fragile until diplomacy and oil trends prove durable."
This move feels like a headline-driven relief rally rather than a regime change: Nasdaq futures +1.2% and WTI down to $88.20 helped risk-on flows, but volatility (VIX ~25.85) and algos remain dominant. Bank of America’s $80–$100/bbl warning is the key macro hinge — a sustained mid-$80s oil price keeps inflation stickier and the Fed more cautious on easing, which disproportionately hurts high-multiple tech (Mag 7) and growth names priced for lower rates. Geopolitics are binary: a real ceasefire would be bullish, but Iranian scepticism and fragile diplomacy mean oil could re-spike fast, re-igniting rate fears and a selloff.
If the US–Iran talks produce even a short, verifiable ceasefire and oil falls further, inflation expectations could ease quickly and trigger a strong tech-led re-rating; the Fed may indeed ‘look through’ a brief shock and keep policy looser than feared.
"Sustained $80+ oil tilts Fed hawkish per BofA, dooming this headline bounce to fizzle without geopolitical de-escalation."
Nasdaq's bounce looks tactical, fueled by a 4.5% WTI dip to $88.20 on US-Iran talk headlines, but Iran dismisses overtures as 'not credible,' and the situation remains fluid per analysts like Polcari—VIX at 25.85 underscores anxiety amid algo-driven volatility. BofA nails it: $80-100 sustained oil keeps Fed hawkish (no base-case hikes, but reinforces caution), as inflation trumps growth risks now. Merck's $6.7B Terns buy (TERN-701 CML data: 75% response rate) smartly plugs Keytruda 2028 cliff (MRK +2% to $119), but OpenAI axing Sora flags AI compute cost squeezes, muting consumer hype amid semis weakness (Micron, Lam down). Fragile relief rally.
If US-Iran diplomacy yields a ceasefire, oil could plunge below $70, easing inflation for Fed cuts and sparking sustained risk-on across tech and broad indices.
"The panel is treating failed diplomacy as symmetric risk to success; it's not—downside is asymmetric and faster."
Everyone's anchored to oil as the macro hinge, but nobody's flagged the real risk: if Iran talks collapse and WTI spikes back to $95+, the Nasdaq doesn't just correct—it faces a *duration shock* on top of hawkish repricing. The VIX at 25.85 isn't anxiety; it's complacency. A failed ceasefire could trigger 3-5% single-day selloff in Mag 7, worse than the current bounce. That binary tail risk is being priced as a minor afterthought.
"The pivot from consumer to enterprise AI is a margin-positive strategic shift, but it cannot offset the systemic weakness in semiconductor equipment stocks."
Claude and Gemini are overstating the 'Sora failure' as a valuation ceiling. Shuttering a high-compute consumer product is a margin-accretive pivot to enterprise B2B, not a sign of AI exhaustion. The real danger isn't OpenAI's unit economics; it's the widening divergence between Merck’s M&A success and the semis' collapse. If ARM and Merck can’t carry the index while Micron and Lam Research bleed, the Nasdaq's 'relief' is actually a distribution phase before a deeper leg down.
"Oil volatility can transmit through credit channels (banks, CLOs, high-yield) and trigger liquidity-driven market stress beyond a pure duration shock."
Everyone's fixated on oil -> Fed -> equities, but a missing channel is credit: a swift WTI spike to $95–100 would stress leveraged E&P borrowers, force draws on credit lines, widen B-/CCC spreads and impair energy-heavy regional banks and private-credit funds. That transmission could spark a liquidity-driven equity selloff distinct from pure duration repricing. Monitor energy loan covenant breaches, bank energy exposure (e.g., regional lenders) and high-yield/CLO spread moves.
"Sora's quick death exposes flawed consumer AI economics, exacerbating semis weakness and foreshadowing AI infrastructure derating."
Gemini misreads Sora: axing it after 6 months isn't a clean margin-accretive pivot—it's a tacit admission of brutal consumer AI unit economics amid $100B+ hyperscaler capex waste. This directly fuels semis collapse (MU -4%, LRCX/AMAT down 2-3%), signaling peak AI infra cycle; Nasdaq bounce papers over a 20-30% derating risk in the space.
Panel Verdict
Consensus ReachedThe panel consensus is bearish, with participants agreeing that the current market rally is fragile and driven by headline news rather than fundamentals. They caution that a collapse in Iran talks and a spike in oil prices could lead to a significant sell-off in equities.
None explicitly stated.
A collapse in Iran talks and a spike in oil prices leading to a duration shock and a significant sell-off in equities.