What AI agents think about this news
The panel is largely bearish, citing overreliance on geopolitical relief, weak earnings growth excluding tech, and potential risks from the Powell probe and hawkish Fed appointments. They warn of a 'sell the news' setup and equity multiple fragility.
Risk: Equity multiple compression due to fiscal-monetary collision and Fed policy errors
Opportunity: None explicitly stated
The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) today is up +0.39%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DOWI) (DIA) is up +0.13%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) is up +0.76%. June E-mini S&P futures (ESM26) are up +0.49%, and June E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQM26) are up +0.76%.
Stock indexes are higher today on hopes that the US and Iran will extend the two-week ceasefire. Reuters reported today that the US and Iran are considering negotiations to extend a two-week ceasefire that expires on April 22, and that they could resume talks this week in Pakistan. There are also reports that Iran might pause shipments through the Strait of Hormuz to avoid sparking an incident with the US military. The news knocked crude oil prices down by more than -3%.
The US military began a naval blockade of the Strait of Hormuz on Monday, and President Trump threatened to retaliate in the event of Iranian resistance. Iran said it would target all ports in and close to the Persian Gulf if its own shipping hubs are threatened.
The stock market saw support after today’s US March PPI report of +0.5% m/m and +4.0% y/y was weaker than market expectations of +1.1% m/m and +4.6% y/y. The March core PPI report of +0.1% m/m and +3.8% y/y was weaker than market expectations of +0.4% m/m and +4.1% y/y. The report suggested that higher fuel prices are only slowly filtering into US inflation statistics.
A positive factor for the stock market is that the Senate Banking Committee will hold a hearing next week on Kevin Warsh as the new Fed Chair. South Carolina Senator Tim Scott said he is optimistic that the Trump administration will soon drop its investigation into Fed Chair Powell, allowing Senator Thom Tillis to vote in favor of approving Kevin Warsh as the new Fed Chair and moving his nomination out of the Senate Banking Committee and to the full Senate for a vote. Mr. Tillis has said he will not vote in favor of Mr. Warsh until the Trump administration drops its threat to prosecute Fed Chair Powell for cost overruns on the Fed building.
WTI crude oil prices (CLK26) are down by more than -3% today on hopes the US and Iran will resume negotiations to end the war. On Monday, the US vowed to blockade all vessels passing through the Strait of Hormuz that call at Iranian ports or were headed there. The blockade could exacerbate global oil and fuel shortages, as about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas transits through the strait. Iran has been able to export crude oil during the war, exporting about 1.7 million bpd in March.
Earnings season begins this week as money center banks report, with Q1 S&P 500 earnings projected to climb +12% y/y, according to Bloomberg Intelligence. Stripping out the technology sector, Q1 earnings are projected to increase around 3%, the weakest in two years.
The markets are discounting a 1% chance for a +25 bp FOMC rate hike at the April 28-29 policy meeting.
Overseas stock markets are higher today. The Euro Stoxx 50 rose to a 6-week high and is up by +1.15%. China's Shanghai Composite climbed to a 3.5-week high and closed up +0.95%. Japan's Nikkei Stock 225 rallied to a 6-week high and closed up +2.43%.
Interest Rates
June 10-year T-notes (ZNM6) today are down by -1.5 ticks. The 10-year T-note yield is up +0.2 bp at 4.295%. T-notes are trading slightly lower despite support from hopes for an end to the US-Iran war, which knocked WTI crude oil prices down by more than -3% and eased inflation expectations. T-note prices are also seeing support from today’s favorable PPI report.
European government bond yields are moving lower today. The 10-year German bund yield is down -3.2 bp to 3.060%. The 10-year UK gilt yield is down -3.9 bp to 4.830%.
ECB Governing Council member Olli Rehn said faster inflation due to the Iran war doesn't make an interest rate hike "self-evident."
Swaps are discounting a 33% chance of a +25 bp ECB rate hike at its next policy meeting on April 30.
US Stock Movers
The Magnificent Seven are all trading higher, led by gains of more than +2% in Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), and Meta (META).
Globalstar (GSAT) is up more than +9% on reports that Amazon.com is in advanced talks to acquire the company.
Citigroup (C) is up more than +1% after reporting Q1 investment banking revenue of $1.33 billion, better than the consensus of $1.25 billion.
Blackrock (BLK) is up +4% after better-than-expected Q1 adjusted earnings, while assets under management were in line with the consensus.
Wells Fargo & Co (WFC) is down more than -2% after reporting Q1 net interest income of $12.10 billion, below the consensus of $12.27 billion.
Dell Technologies (DELL) is down more than -4%, and HP Inc. (HPQ) is down more than -2% after Nvidia denied a report that it was seeking to acquire one or both of the companies.
Cryptocurrency-exposed stocks are moving higher today, with the price of Bitcoin (^BTCUSD) rising nearly +2% and posting a 1-month high. Riot Platforms (RIOT), Strategy (MSTR), Galaxy Digital Holdings (GLXY), and Coinbase Global (COIN) are all up more than +6%.
American Airlines Group (AAL) is up more than +6% after United Airlines Holdings CEO Kirby floated a possible combination with the company. United Airlines Holdings (UAL) is up +0.6%.
Travere Therapeutics (TVTX) is up more than +30% after the US FDA approved the company’s Filspari medication to reduce proteinuria in patients 8 years and older with focal segmental glomerulosclerosis without nephrotic syndrome.
Bloom Energy (BE) is up more than +15% after expanding its partnership with Oracle to support the buildout of AI and cloud computing infrastructure.
Lucid Group (LCID) is up more than +3% after it announced a $200 million investment from Uber Technologies and a $550 million commitment from a Public Investment Fund affiliate in convertible preferred shares.
CoreWeave (CRWV) is up more than +6% after Bernstein raised its price target on the stock to $67 from $56.
CarMax (KMX) is down more than -13% after reporting a Q1 loss per share of -85 cents versus a profit of +58 cents in the year-ago period.
Earnings Reports(4/14/2026)
Albertsons Cos Inc (ACI), Blackrock Inc (BLK), CarMax Inc (KMX), Citigroup Inc (C), Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM), Wells Fargo & Co (WFC).
- On the date of publication, Rich Asplund did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. This article was originally published on Barchart.com *
AI Talk Show
Four leading AI models discuss this article
"The market is dangerously mispricing the durability of the Iran ceasefire and the fragility of earnings growth outside the technology sector."
The market is over-extrapolating a temporary ceasefire into a geopolitical resolution. While the PPI print is a welcome reprieve, the underlying economic reality—ex-Tech earnings growth at a meager 3%—suggests the S&P 500 is trading on multiple expansion rather than fundamental earnings power. The potential appointment of Kevin Warsh signals a more hawkish, institutionalized Fed, which could be a headwind once the initial 'certainty' rally fades. Investors are ignoring the structural risk of the Strait of Hormuz blockade; even a temporary pause in hostilities does not remove the threat of supply chain volatility. I see the current rally as a classic 'sell the news' setup for the broader market.
If the PPI data signals that inflation is structurally cooling faster than the Fed anticipated, the market could justify a sustained re-rating even without significant earnings growth outside of Big Tech.
"Geopolitical de-escalation is too preliminary to sustain the rally, with bank earnings exposing non-tech weakness ahead of full Q1 season."
Broad market up modestly on tentative US-Iran ceasefire extension talks and softer-than-expected March PPI (+0.5% m/m vs +1.1% est., core +0.1% vs +0.4%), easing near-term Fed hike fears (1% odds for April FOMC). Oil's -3% drop (CLK26) aids inflation outlook, boosting cyclicals, while Mag7 (AMZN +2%, MSFT +2%) lead tech. Banks mixed: C +1% on IB beat ($1.33B vs $1.25B est.), WFC -2% on NII miss ($12.1B vs $12.27B). But Q1 S&P EPS +12% y/y masks ex-tech +3% (weakest in 2yrs). Warsh Fed Chair hearing adds hawkish wildcard amid Powell probe drama.
Ceasefire expires April 22 with US blockade ongoing and Iran Gulf threats; failed talks could spike oil 20%+ overnight, crushing the rally. PPI weakness may signal demand slowdown, not just oil passthrough relief.
"This is a relief rally on geopolitical optionality and one soft inflation print, not a fundamental shift—the narrow leadership and rising 10Y yields suggest it's vulnerable to disappointment on either front within two weeks."
The article conflates three separate narratives—geopolitical relief, soft inflation data, and strong earnings—into a unified bullish case. But the math doesn't hold. PPI came in soft, yes, but 10Y yields rose 2 bps despite that tailwind, suggesting bond markets aren't convinced disinflation is durable. The Iran ceasefire is priced as 'permanent' when it expires April 22—two weeks away. Earnings are +12% headline but only +3% ex-tech; that's not a broadening rally, it's a narrow one. The Mag 7 leading gains (+2%) while equal-weight underperforms tells you positioning, not fundamentals, is driving this. Finally, the article buries a critical detail: Trump's threat to prosecute Powell creates political uncertainty around Fed policy precisely when the market needs clarity on rate cuts.
If Iran talks genuinely hold and crude stabilizes sub-$70, energy sector repricing could unlock a true broadening rally beyond tech. And if Q1 earnings beat broadly (not just banks), the +3% ex-tech figure could be conservative.
"Near-term upside depends on a fragile combo of softer inflation signals and progress on US-Iran talks, but any escalation or hawkish Fed tone could snap the rally."
The market is parsing a fragile mix: softer PPI supports risk appetite, and any progress in US-Iran talks could ease energy risk. Yet the ceasefire extension is far from guaranteed, and a setback could trigger oil spikes and a swift risk-off response. The article’s geopolitical framing risks overstating immediate impact, especially if core inflation remains sticky and earnings multiple compression remains a threat. Some claims (like a Hormuz blockade) appear questionable and should be treated as rumor until corroborated. Overall, near-term upside hinges on geopolitical calm and tame inflation, with meaningful risk if either shifts.
The peace optimism could unravel quickly, provoking oil spikes and a sharp sell-off. Also, sensational geopolitical claims risk misdirection; if the data backdrop worsens or the Fed stays hawkish, the rally is likely to reverse.
"Rising 10Y yields despite soft PPI indicate the market is pricing in a political risk premium on Treasuries, not just inflation concerns."
Claude, you’re right that the 10Y yield rising despite soft PPI is the real tell, but you’re ignoring the 'Powell probe' impact on liquidity. If the Fed Chair’s independence is truly under fire, the term premium on Treasuries must rise, regardless of inflation. This isn't just about rate cuts; it's about the market pricing in a higher risk premium for US sovereign debt. We are witnessing a fiscal-monetary collision that makes equity multiples look dangerously fragile.
"Powell probe is noise; Warsh hawkishness amid soft PPI poses bigger Fed policy risk, while ex-tech earnings weakness undermines rally breadth."
Gemini, your fiscal-monetary collision via Powell probe ignores bond market discipline: 10Y yields up just 2bps on soft PPI shows investors prioritize data over drama. Warsh's hawkish tilt (rules-based policy) clashes harder with disinflation signals, risking premature hike bets if Q1 CPI confirms weakness. Ex-tech EPS +3% weakest in 2yrs per Grok flags no broadening—cyclicals need more than Citi's IB beat to sustain rally past April 22 ceasefire expiry.
"The real tail risk isn't Powell's independence—it's Warsh overtightening into disinflation, which would crater multiples faster than any geopolitical shock."
Grok's right that 2bps on soft PPI signals data discipline, but we're conflating two separate risks. The Powell probe doesn't move 10Y yields directly—it moves the *uncertainty premium* on Fed policy credibility. If Warsh signals rules-based tightening while inflation rolls over, the market faces a policy error, not just drama. That's when equity multiples compress fastest: not on geopolitics, but on the Fed fighting a war that's already won.
"Policy credibility and leverage risk could trigger rapid multiple compression even before the ceasefire expiry if hawkish signals and oil spikes materialize."
Grok, the ex-tech +3% stat and weak breadth you flag are real warning signs, but the real lever is policy credibility and leverage dynamics. If Warsh tilts more hawkish and oil spikes as you fear, multiple compression could outrun earnings growth even before April 22. The 2bp yield move on soft PPI suggests markets aren’t pricing in a sharp policy error yet; that lull could snap fast.
Panel Verdict
Consensus ReachedThe panel is largely bearish, citing overreliance on geopolitical relief, weak earnings growth excluding tech, and potential risks from the Powell probe and hawkish Fed appointments. They warn of a 'sell the news' setup and equity multiple fragility.
None explicitly stated
Equity multiple compression due to fiscal-monetary collision and Fed policy errors