Early Look
Friday, May 29, 2026
Futures | Up/Down | % | Last |
Dow | 78.00 | 0.15% | 50,818 |
S&P 500 | 7.25 | 0.10% | 7,589 |
Nasdaq | 29.50 | 0.10% | 30,336 |
The amazing record run on Wall Street continued on Thursday as U.S. equities reversed earlier weakness and closed at record highs after reports of a potential 60-day US/Iran ceasefire extension eased geopolitical fears. The S&P 500 index (SPX) and Nasdaq Composite both extended their winning streaks to 6 days on Thursday, touching record highs along with the Dow Industrials and Russell 2000, putting the S&P on track for a 9th consecutive week of gains on this final day of May. It has been two straight months of non-stop gains for U.S. averages, with the Technology sector (XLK) up about 17% this month (30% YTD), the SOX semi index +22% MTD, and the Nasdaq Comp +8% MTD. An Axios report yesterday morning that U.S./Iran negotiators agreed to a 60-day MoU to extend the ceasefire and restart nuclear talks, though Iran’s Tasnim later pushed back and said no final agreement had been reached. Also helping was cooler-than-expected April PCE data (though above prior month) and a downward Q1 GDP revision supported risk appetite and boosted Treasuries. Oil pared sharp overnight gains after the ceasefire headlines, though still finished modestly higher following renewed military strikes earlier in the session. It was a big night in tech earnings as shares of DELL (rallies 37% overnight), MDB, NTAP, PD all soar after results in hardware, software and storage (ESTC, AMBA, S all decline post results), while retailers AEO, GAP declined on results/guidance. In Asian markets, The Nikkei Index surged 1,636 points, or 2.53% to settle at 66,329, the Shanghai Index fell -30 points to 4,068, and the Hang Seng Index gained 176 points to 25,182. In Europe, the German DAX is up 50 points to 25,143, while the FTSE 100 rises 19 points to 10,445. A truly remarkable run for global markets, as rising Treasury yields the last few weeks globally (though took a breather the last week), higher energy prices (again prices off worst levels), and rising expectations of Fed rate hikes vs. the expected three cuts forecasted when the year started, have done nothing to investor confidence with the CBOE Volatility index (VIX) closing at lowest levels since January as the “all-in” AI growth demand story has revitalized this market, as evidenced by spectacular moves like DELL overnight and SNOW the day prior.
Market Closing Prices Yesterday
Economic Calendar for Today
Earnings Calendar:
Other Key Events:
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
Nymex | -1.65 | 87.25 |
Brent | -1.17 | 92.54 |
Gold | 37.90 | 4,570.30 |
EUR/USD | -0.0012 | 1.1642 |
JPY/USD | 0.03 | 159.26 |
10-Year Note | -0.008 | 4.447% |
World News
Sector News Breakdown
Consumer
Energy, Industrials and Materials
Healthcare
Technology Software
Technology Hardware
Mid-Morning Look
Friday, May 29, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | 219.41 | 0.43% | 50,888 |
S&P 500 | 15.48 | 0.20% | 7,579 |
Nasdaq | 24.65 | 0.09% | 26,942 |
Russell 2000 | -18.90 | 0.64% | 2,917 |
U.S. stock markets jump on the open, looking to make it 7 straight up days for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, at new all-time highs (along with the Dow) and the S&P on track for its 9th straight week of gains as technology stock upside momentum continues to astound. There appears to be a “big” story every day in tech, with DELL grabbing the headlines Friday on a massive quarterly beat and huge guidance, sending shares up over 30% today as the AI growth engine remains in full effect. The results brings attention to the hardware sector with shares of HPE, HPQ, SMCI, moving strong this morning. Just the latest tech sector to find upward momentum that has seen memory stocks (MU, SNDK, WDC), semis (ARM, AMD, INTC), equipment names (LRCX, KLAC), optical (LITE, AAOI, COHR), quantum (IBM, IONQ, QBTS), neoclouds (NBIS, CRWV), data centers (IREN, HUT, WULF, CIFR) among those gapping the last few months as investors look for any area they can flock too with AI leverage (though some seeing weakness today). This morning, eight of the eleven S&P sectors are down on the day early including notable declines for XLC, XLE, XLP...but Tech (XLK) rises over 1.5%, leading again and keeping broader markets higher as software joins the tech party (after better SNOW, MDB, OKTA results lately) along with mass gains in semis as the SOX tops 13,000, rising 2% (up 24% this month). Massive stock moves in DELL, OKTA, PD, NTAP, ASAN in tech sector post earnings overnight. Little weakness in Small caps as Chicago PMI manufacturing data stuns to the upside, raising cases for Fed rate hikes.
Oil prices dropped to a six-week low as the US and Iran tentatively agreed to extend a ceasefire by 60 days, strengthening optimism the Strait of Hormuz may soon reopen. Brent traded near $92 a Barrel, set for a 19% monthly drop, the biggest since 2020. President Donald Trump has yet to sign off on the terms of the agreement, according to a person familiar with the matter. The Brent benchmark has plunged by about 11% this week for its steepest weekly decline since the week ending April 6. WTI, meanwhile, has dropped by nearly 10% for its biggest weekly loss since the week ending April 13. Prices have been volatile in recent sessions, swinging by as much as $6 for both benchmarks on conflicting signals over a possible end to the Iran war and potential reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, which was previously a conduit for a fifth of the world's oil and liquefied natural gas supplies. Precious metals rebound
Risk appetite has firmed the last 2 days on a report that an extended ceasefire deal was awaiting Trump's approval. Axios broke it mid-morning in the US, with Barak Ravid citing US officials that negotiators had reached a 60-day MOU to extend the truce, with Trump asking for a couple of days to decide. Terms reported include unrestricted Hormuz transit, Iranian de-mining within 30 days, the US naval blockade lifted, and an Iranian commitment not to pursue a weapon, with HEU disposal and sanctions and asset-unfreezing left to the 60-day window.
Economic Data
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | -0.72 | 88.18 |
Brent | -1.57 | 92.14 |
Gold | 45.10 | 4,577.50 |
EUR/USD | -0.0008 | 1.1643 |
JPY/USD | 0.08 | 159.32 |
10-Year Note | -0.002 | 4.453% |
Sector Movers Today
Stock GAINERS
Stock LAGGARDS
Closing Recap
Friday, May 29, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | 363.68 | 0.72% | 51,032 |
S&P 500 | 16.50 | 0.22% | 7,580 |
Nasdaq | 55.15 | 0.20% | 26,972 |
Russell 2000 | -16.99 | 0.58% | 2,919 |
U.S. stocks held in positive territory most of the afternoon as the S&P 500 (SPX) posted its longest winning streak since December 2023 at 9-weeks. If it can close next week higher for a 10th straight week, it would be the first time since “Back to the Future” was in movie theaters (1985 for you non movie buffs) when it went 12 straight weeks ended that December. Overall, the S&P 500, Nasdaq Comp, Dow Industrials all posted record closing highs again today with the S&P and Nasdaq making it 7 straight days of gains in what has been one of the more historic 2 month bull runs in history, paced by the massive gains in the technology sector! Speaking of the S&P Tech sector (XLK) rose 5.6% this week and was up over 19% in May (and +32% YTD) while the next best monthly sector winner was Healthcare (XLV) 2.4% on the month, while Materials, Communications, Financials, Industrials, Consumer Staples, and REITs slipped and both Energy (XLE) and Utilities (XLU) fell over 5% this month. Still, despite most sectors finishing lower in May, the fact the tech sector is so heavily weighed lifted the S&P 500 and Nasdaq overall. The semiconductor index (SOX) topped 13,000 today before paring gains after having been the main driver of the tech sector gains this year, now up 81% on the year. Economic data has been showing improvement as the lone piece of data today showed Chicago PMI for May a whopping 62.7, well above consensus of 51.8 (and prior month reading of 49.2) and highest reading since January 2022! Oil prices eased, posting big losses this week, capped by comments late week as President Trump said he is making a "final determination" on the Iran deal, helping push WTI crude below $87 a barrel for the first time since April 21st. Though no final decision was made as of the close today, oil remains lower and stocks still held on to gains. It has been a helluva run for overall markets heading into the summer. For the week, the S&P 500 gained 1.43%, the Nasdaq climbed 2.39%, and the Dow climbed 0.9%; for May, the S&P 500 gained 5.15%, the Nasdaq climbed 8.36%, and the Dow climbed 2.78%.
With the bulk of earnings now truly behind us after a few key retailers and tech names the last two weeks (NVDA, SNOW, DELL, WMT, etc.), and PCE inflation data also behind us, market attention turns back to jobs data with ADP, JOLTs, and Nonfarm payrolls next week. The jobs report will be key especially after data showed this week that consumers are tapping savings as the Savings Rate falling to near historic lows of 2.6%. Also, Fed rhetoric has ramped up in more hawkish tones setting up trouble for new Fed Chair Warsh. No major central bank actions this upcoming week. Obviously headlines pertaining to a deal between the U.S./Iran is of much importance for the market as the war drags on for three months and the Strait of Hormuz still not allowing free passage easily. This weekend, many will focus on the ASCO cancer conference taking place in Chicago, a big event for many cancer related drug companies.
Federal Reserve officials continued to signal the U.S. central bank may need to raise interest rates in the future if the war in the Middle East leads to a persistent increase in already-high inflation. The potential shift in the monetary policy outlook has even been embraced by Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman, one of the central bank's most dovish policymakers. Bowman told a conference in Iceland on Friday that the war and its resulting energy shock could change her view on the outlook for rates. Philadelphia Fed President Anna Paulson said on Friday that monetary policy is "well positioned" considering the unacceptably high inflation pressures and economic uncertainty.
Commodities
Currencies & Treasuries
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | -1.54 | 87.36 |
Brent | -1.66 | 92.05 |
Gold | 60.60 | 4,593.00 |
EUR/USD | 0.0015 | 1.1666 |
JPY/USD | 0.00 | 159.22 |
10-Year Note | -0.002 | 4.452% |
Sector News Breakdown
Retail, Consumer Staples & Restaurants:
Autos, Leisure, Gaming & Lodging:
Energy
Biotech & Pharma:
Healthcare Services & MedTech movers:
Industrials & Materials
AI & Software movers
Hardware, Components, Networking movers:
Not offered or endorsed by Regal Securities
Street Recommendations
Friday, May 29, 2026
BARCLAYS
BERNSTEIN
BOFA
BTIG
CANACCORD
CANTOR FITZGERALD
CITI
CLSA
DEUTSCHE BANK
DZ BANK
GOLDMAN SACHS
GUGGENHEIM
HSBC
JEFFERIES
JPMORGAN
KEEFE BRUYETTE
KEYBANC
MIZUHO
MORGAN STANLEY
NEEDHAM
NORTHLAND
PIPER SANDLER
RAYMOND JAMES
RBC CAPITAL
STEPHENS
STIFEL
SUSQUEHANNA
TD COWEN
TRUIST
UBS
WELLS FARGO
WOLFE RESEARCH
Rating abbreviations…
***OP = Outperform
***SP = Sector Perform
***UP = Underperform
***OW = Overweight
***EW = Equal-weight
***UW = Underweight
***Report powered by thefly.com***
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