
- Moving the market
The major indexes bounced nicely early on, as traders took comfort that the U.S.-Iran situation didn’t escalate over the weekend.
Geopolitical tensions stayed in check, and with stocks looking oversold after recent weakness, dip-buyers jumped in to fuel a rebound.
Meta climbed more than 2% on a report (which the company called “speculative”) that it’s planning to lay off over 20% of its workforce.
Nvidia added more than 1% ahead of its GTC conference kicking off today. Those moves helped lift the broader market after the S&P 500 posted its third straight losing week and closed at its lowest level of the year on Friday.
Oil prices eased back after Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the U.S. is allowing Iranian oil tankers to pass through the Strait of Hormuz.
A Wall Street Journal report added to the relief, noting the U.S. will soon announce a coalition of countries to escort ships through the Strait.
President Trump had ordered strikes on Iranian military assets on Kharg Island Friday (avoiding oil infrastructure), but he warned further action could target those facilities if Iran keeps blocking the route.
By the close, the indexes locked in a winning session, with the Nasdaq leading the way. An early short squeeze fizzled, but a second one later in the day held up nicely.
Bond yields backed off recent highs (helping equities), the dollar gave back Friday’s gains, gold treaded water around $5,000, and Bitcoin extended its recent run, recapturing $74,000—its highest since early February.
Right now, the geopolitical crisis seems to be following its own roadmap, so today’s bounce leaves me wondering whether it’s the start of a real turnaround or just a one-day outlier.
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