What AI agents think about this news
The panel is bearish on the current market due to geopolitical risks, inflationary pressure from oil prices, weak earnings growth excluding tech, and tightening liquidity. They warn of a potential 'energy trap' and policy error by the Fed.
Risk: Inflationary pressure from elevated oil prices and potential policy error by the Fed
Opportunity: None explicitly stated
The S&P 500 Index ($SPX) (SPY) today is up +0.17%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($DOWI) (DIA) is up +0.10%, and the Nasdaq 100 Index ($IUXX) (QQQ) is up +0.06%. June E-mini S&P futures (ESM26) are up +0.19%, and June E-mini Nasdaq futures (NQM26) are up +0.05%.
Stock indexes are moving higher today, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 10 posting new all-time highs amid strong corporate earnings results and resurgent optimism around artificial intelligence. Gains in stocks are limited today amid rising oil prices and bond yields after the US and Iran failed to reach terms to end the war in the Middle East. Global bond yields rose on concern that the continued standoff will keep energy prices elevated and could force the world’s central banks to tighten monetary policy. The 10-year T-note yield is up +3 bp to 4.39%.
More News from Barchart
In the latest developments in the Middle East, President Trump and Iran rejected each other's latest peace proposals to end the 10-week conflict. Iran offered to transfer some of its stockpile of highly enriched uranium to a third country but rejected the idea of dismantling its nuclear facilities. Iran also demanded a lifting of the US naval blockade and sanctions relief, while maintaining a degree of control over traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. Despite the ceasefire in place since last month, a drone strike over the weekend set a cargo vessel ablaze off Qatar in the Persian Gulf. Also, the United Arab Emirates and Kuwait both said they intercepted hostile drones.
Chinese trade news was better than expected, a positive factor for global growth. China Apr exports rose +14.1% y/y, stronger than expectations of +8.4% y/y. Apr imports rose +25.3% y/y, stronger than expectations of 20.0% y/y.
WTI crude oil prices (CLM26) are up by more than 2% today, as optimism that the US and Iran would reopen the Strait of Hormuz was dashed after President Trump said Iran's latest peace proposals were "totally unacceptable." The strait remains essentially closed, as about a fifth of the world’s oil and liquefied natural gas transits through the strait. Goldman Sachs estimates that the current disruption has drawn down nearly 500 million bbl from global crude stockpiles, with the drawdown potentially reaching 1 billion bbl by June.
The markets are discounting a 5% chance of a -25 bp FOMC rate cut at the next FOMC meeting on June 16-17.
Earnings reports thus far in this reporting season have been supportive of stocks. As of today, 83% of the 446 S&P 500 companies that reported Q1 earnings have beaten estimates. Q1 S&P 500 earnings are 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.
Overseas stock markets are mixed today. The Euro Stoxx 50 is down -0.28%. China's Shanghai Composite rallied to a 10-year high and closed up +1.08%. Japan's Nikkei Stock Average fell from a record high and closed down -0.47%.
Interest Rates
June 10-year T-notes (ZNM6) today are down -5 ticks. The 10-year T-note yield is up +2.7 bp to 4.381%. T-notes are under pressure today from a +2% jump in WTI crude oil prices, which is boosting inflation expectations. Also, supply pressures are weighing on T-notes as the Treasury will auction $125 billion of T-notes and T-bonds in this week’s quarterly refunding, beginning with today’s $58 billion auction of 3-year T-notes.
European government bond yields are moving higher today. The 10-year German Bund yield is up +2.5 bp to 3.030%. The 10-year UK gilt yield is up +7.4 bp to 4.986%.
ECB Governing Council member Martin Kocher said, "If the situation around energy prices does not improve significantly, an interest rate hike will be unavoidable in the near future."
Swaps are discounting an 84% chance of a +25 bp ECB rate hike at its next policy meeting on June 11.
US Stock Movers
Chipmakers and AI-infrastructure stocks are climbing today amid continued optimism over AI infrastructure build-outs. Qualcomm (QCOM) is up more than +6% to lead gainers in the Nasdaq 100, and Micron Technology (MU) is up more than +5%. Also, Western Digital (WDC) is up by more than +4%, and Intel (INTC) and Seagate Technology Holdings Plc (STX) are up more than +3%. In addition, Texas Instruments (TXN) is up by more than +2%, and Nvidia (NVDA), Applied Materials (AMAT), and Lam Research (LRCX) are up more than +1%.
Mining stocks are moving higher today with rallies in gold, silver, and copper prices. Barrick Mining (B) is up more than +8%, and Coeur Mining (CDE) and Hecla Mining (HL) are up more than +7%. Also, Freeport McMoRan (FCX) is up more than +4%, and Anglogold Ashanti (AU), Southern Copper (SCCO), and Newmont Corp (NEM) are up more than +3%.
Airline stocks and cruise line operators are under pressure today from a +2% increase in WTI crude oil prices, which boosts fuel costs and undercuts the companies' profitability prospects. Carnival (CCL) and Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd (RCL) are down more than -4%, and Alaska Air Group (ALK) is down more than -3%. Also, American Airlines Group (AAL) and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings (NCLH) are down more than -2%. In addition, United Airlines Holdings (UAL), Southwest Airlines (LUV), and Delta Air Lines (DAL) are down more than -1%.
Beazer Homes USA Inc (BZH) is up more than +29% on a report that said Dream Finders Homes is close to announcing a $704 million offer to acquire the company.
Babcock & Wilcox (BW) is up more than +18% after reporting Q1 revenue grew 44% year-over-year, and that Q1 Ebitda nearly quadrupled.
Monday.com (MNDY) is up more than +11% after reporting Q1 adjusted EP of $1.15, better than the consensus of 93 cents, and raising its full-year revenue forecast to $1.466 billion to $1.474 billion from a previous forecast of $1.45 billion to $1.46 billion, better than the consensus of $1.46 billion.
Moderna (MRNA) is up more than +7% after announcing it’s researching vaccines to protect against hantaviruses.
Lumentum Holdings (LITE) is up more than +6% after Nasdaq announced that the stock will replace CoStar Group in the Nasdaq 100 before the market opens on Monday, May 18.
Trade Desk (TTD) is down more than -9% to lead losers in the S&P 500 after HSBC downgraded the stock to reduce from hold with a price target of $20.
Iren Ltd (IREN) is down more than -7% after announcing that it intends to offer $2 billion of convertible senior notes due 2033 in a private offering.
Dell Technologies (DELL) is down more than -5% after UBS downgraded the stock to neutral from buy.
Wendy’s (WEN) is down more than -3% after JPMorgan Chase downgraded the stock to underweight from neutral with a price target of $6.
Tyler Technologies (TYL) is down more than -3% after announcing that it intends to offer $1 billion of convertible senior notes due 2031 in a private offering.
Mosaic (MOS) is down more than -2% after forecasting Q2 phosphate sales of 1.4 million to 1.7 million tons, weaker than the consensus of 1.78 million tons.
Earnings Reports(5/11/2026)
AECOM (ACM), Amentum Holdings Inc (AMTM), AST SpaceMobile Inc (ASTS), Certara Inc (CERT), Circle Internet Group Inc (CRCL), Constellation Energy Corp (CEG), Figure Technology Solutions Inc (FIGR), Fox Corp (FOXA), Halozyme Therapeutics Inc (HALO), Mosaic Co/The (MOS), Ovintiv Inc (OVV), Simon Property Group Inc (SPG), STERIS PLC (STE), ZoomInfo Technologies Inc (GTM).
- 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 reliance on AI-driven earnings to offset a 20% energy cost shock creates a fragile market structure vulnerable to a sudden repricing of the term premium."
The market is currently pricing in a 'goldilocks' scenario that ignores the geopolitical reality of a closed Strait of Hormuz. While AI-driven earnings growth at +12% y/y is impressive, it is masking significant underlying weakness; excluding tech, earnings growth is a stagnant +3%. The market is ignoring the inflationary impulse of a 2% jump in WTI crude, which effectively acts as a tax on the consumer. With the 10-year yield pushing 4.39% and the ECB signaling potential rate hikes, the liquidity environment is tightening. Investors are buying the AI narrative while ignoring the macro 'energy trap' that could force a policy error from the Fed.
The strength of Chinese exports suggests global demand is robust enough to absorb higher energy costs, potentially sustaining corporate margins despite inflationary pressures.
"Hormuz disruption's 500M-1B bbl stockpile drawdown (per Goldman) risks stagflation that overwhelms AI-driven earnings beats and threatens the bull market."
S&P 500 and Nasdaq records mask fragility: 83% earnings beats drive gains, but ex-tech Q1 EPS growth at +3% is weakest in two years, per Bloomberg. AI semis shine (QCOM +6%, MU +5%, NVDA +1%), yet Hormuz standoff—20% global oil/LNG route disrupted—has drawn 500M bbl stockpiles (Goldman), eyeing 1B by June, spiking WTI +2% and 10Y yield +3bp to 4.39%. Airlines tank (CCL -4%, RCL -4%) as fuel costs soar; ECB eyes hike on energy. China's +25% imports signal stockpiling frenzy. Stagflation risks cap broad upside despite tech resilience.
If Iran concessions reopen Hormuz swiftly or OPEC+ offsets supply, oil eases, yields drop, and FOMC's 5% -25bp cut odds rise, turbocharging cyclicals and broad market.
"The market is celebrating tech earnings while ignoring that non-tech earnings growth has stalled to +3% YoY and structural oil supply disruption is forcing central banks toward tightening, not cutting."
The headline screams 'record highs' but the actual moves are anemic: SPX +0.17%, NDX +0.06%. That's not conviction. The real story is a bifurcated market: chipmakers rallying on AI hype while airlines crater on oil, mining surges on inflation fears, and the 10Y yield climbing 2.7bp. Tech earnings beat (83% of 446 companies), but stripping out tech, Q1 growth is only +3%—weakest in two years. The Middle East standoff is now a structural oil shock: Goldman estimates 500M–1B barrels drawn from global reserves. That's inflationary pressure the Fed can't ignore, especially with ECB already signaling rate hikes. The market is pricing in only 5% odds of a June cut—but if energy stays elevated and inflation sticks, that's a policy error waiting to happen.
Tech earnings are genuinely strong and AI capex cycles typically run 3–5 years; if infrastructure spending accelerates despite rate headwinds, multiple expansion could persist. Chinese trade data (+14.1% exports, +25.3% imports) suggests global demand isn't collapsing yet.
"Durable gains depend on AI-driven capex and earnings momentum; without that, energy volatility or higher-for-longer rates will compress multiples."
Despite the headline of new highs, the narrative relies on a narrow AI-infrastructure rally and improving Q1 figures. The gain backdrop is tempered by macro frictions: oil up, yields higher, geopolitical flare-ups in the Middle East, and hawkish signals from ECB/Fed. Breadth is thin—leaders are chips/AI hardware (QCOM, MU, NVDA, AMAT, LRCX) while cyclicals like airlines and energy names lag. If AI demand slows or energy volatility persists, elevated discount rates could compress valuations. The market pricing of only a 5% chance of a June rate cut looks optimistic given the macro backdrop.
Counterpoint: stronger-than-expected earnings momentum and durable AI capex could keep leadership intact, and oil relief or policy accommodation might stabilize markets. If AI demand proves stickier and central banks pause any further tightening, the rally could continue.
"The market is ignoring credit spread widening and margin compression in non-tech sectors as a leading indicator of systemic risk."
Claude and Grok focus on the 3% ex-tech earnings growth, but that misses the second-order effect: operating leverage. If non-tech firms are struggling with input costs, their margins will compress rapidly if pricing power wanes. We are ignoring the credit spread widening in high-yield bonds, which is a far more reliable indicator of systemic stress than headline equity indices. If the 'energy tax' persists, the current 4.39% yield on the 10Y will likely breach 4.5% quickly.
"Gemini's HY spread widening lacks evidence from sources, and dollar strength poses an unmentioned EM margin risk."
Gemini, your high-yield credit spread widening is a new claim unsupported by the article, Bloomberg earnings data, or Goldman oil stockpiles cited—verify it, as spreads remain historically tight (~320bps OAS). This weakens the systemic stress angle. Overlooked risk: dollar surge from 4.39% 10Y squeezes EM corporates, amplifying non-tech margin pain beyond energy tax.
"EM corporates facing dollar strength plus energy inflation is a compounding margin risk the panel hasn't priced into the 3% ex-tech growth weakness."
Grok's pushback on Gemini's credit spread claim is fair—unsupported assertions weaken the systemic stress case. But Grok's EM corporate squeeze angle is real and underexplored: a stronger dollar (via 4.39% yields) compounds margin pressure beyond just energy. Non-US firms face dual headwinds: input cost inflation plus FX headwinds. That's a third-order effect nobody quantified yet.
"Liquidity and refinancing risk may trigger the next shock even with tight credit spreads, especially for non-tech and EM issuers."
Grok, you’re right that credit spreads aren’t bleeding; but you’re missing a funding-liquidity angle. A 4.39% yield plus a stronger dollar raises refinancing and covenant risk for highly levered, non-tech and EM issuers even if OAS stays ~320bp. That can corral risk appetite and hit equity risk premia before credit spreads widen. Don’t assume tight spreads = systemic calm; the next shock may be liquidity-driven, not spread-driven.
Panel Verdict
Consensus ReachedThe panel is bearish on the current market due to geopolitical risks, inflationary pressure from oil prices, weak earnings growth excluding tech, and tightening liquidity. They warn of a potential 'energy trap' and policy error by the Fed.
None explicitly stated
Inflationary pressure from elevated oil prices and potential policy error by the Fed