
- Moving the market
Stocks kicked things off on a strong note, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq moving higher early, powered once again by tech.
A big part of the optimism seemed tied to growing expectations that the U.S. and Iran could be inching toward some kind of deal to wind down tensions.
One of the big winners was Micron, which surged a massive 15% after analysts turned increasingly bullish. UBS even floated the idea of more than 100% upside, pointing to long-term agreements as a key driver. Not bad for a stock that started last week on shaky ground during the broader sell-off in memory chip names.
On the geopolitical front, things remain a bit of a mixed signal. President Trump said talks with Iran are “proceeding nicely,” but also made it clear the U.S. is ready to take action if things fall apart.
At the same time, the U.S. confirmed it carried out “self-defense” strikes in southern Iran, targeting missile sites and boats involved in mine activity—though officials emphasized restraint amid the ongoing ceasefire.
Right now, markets seem to be leaning toward the idea that a détente could be announced in the coming days. That raises the big question: how much of this good news is already baked into prices?
By the close, it was a risk-on vibe. Small caps and the Nasdaq led the charge, while the Dow lagged.
Lower rate-hike expectations helped push bond yields down, the dollar bounced a bit, and commodities were mixed—gold gave back some of yesterday’s gains. Bitcoin had a wild ride too, briefly touching $78K before sliding back toward $75.5K.
The underlying hope is that progress on the U.S.-Iran front could ease energy prices, cool inflation expectations, and keep pressure off yields—but for now, traders seem to be cautiously optimistic.
So, I am pondering: Are markets getting ahead of themselves, or is there still more upside if a deal actually comes through?
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