The market is betting on peace in the war with Iran while riding the relentless surge in tech stocks.
Asia markets rumbled again on Thursday as Japan returned from its extended spring holidays and the Nikkei 225 roared nearly 6% higher on the opening day of trading.
That takes the regional benchmark close to a 25% gain for the year, well outpacing the 11.4% advance recorded for the tech-focused Nasdaq and the 8% rise for the S&P 500.
Not much has changed on the ground, or in the Strait of Hormuz, this week apart from sentiment, which seems tied to reports of a near-term deal between the U.S. and Iran that will end two months of hostilities and reopen the world's busiest oil and energy conduit.
Crude prices have slumped more than 12% over the past two sessions, with Brent futures falling below the $100 a barrel mark, on hopes of a near-term agreement that will lead to longer, more detailed peace talks between Washington and Tehran.
But with stocks now more than 16% higher than their late March trough, and the first-quarter earnings season largely finished, the mood on Wall Street is expected to switch quickly.
Jobs data on Friday could put the final nail in bets on a Federal Reserve rate cut this year, while crude prices and Treasury bond yields remain elevated enough from their prewar starts to suggest inflation will continue to echo through the world's largest economy well into the fall.
The war may be nearing its end, but the cleanup in certain markets will continue. The only question that remains is whether stocks, and in particular tech, can maintain their pristine edge.
-- Martin Baccardax
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Arm Beats Expectations But Demand Might Be Hard to Meet
Arm beat expectations for quarterly earnings and revenue but suggested uncertainty around meeting surging demand for a new homegrown chip. Its CPUs are showing the benefits of balancing performance and energy consumption, attracting Amazon Web Services, Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud.
-- Arm reported fourth-quarter adjusted earnings of 60 cents a share and
revenue up 20% to $1.49 billion. Licensing revenue rose 29% from a year
ago, to $819 million, also beating forecasts. It was already getting a
boost from AMD, which has doubled its estimate for the size of the server
CPU market by 2030.
-- That's a market that Arm is rapidly entering. Arm also provided good
guidance, seeing $2 billion of demand for a new homemade chip in fiscal
years 2027 and 2028 combined, twice its previous estimate. The data
center business, becoming its largest, is on track for $15 billion.
-- One soft spot for the quarter was royalty payments, indicating that
shipments of Arm-based chips may have been lower than expected during the
period. Royalty revenue rose 11% to $671 million, driven by growth in
smartphones and AI.
-- Arm's instruction set architecture is the major alternative to the x86
architecture used by Intel and AMD. It makes designs for different parts
of chips, and makes money from licensing and royalties paid by customers
Apple, Nvidia, Samsung, Qualcomm, and others.
What's Next: The rapid growth of mobile devices has made Arm the most prevalent instruction set in the world and has created a huge ecosystem of chips, software, and developers. Now Arm CPUs are challenging x86 chips, and hyperscalers all have custom Arm CPUs available for customers to rent over the internet.
-- Adam Levine
Apple Stock Hits a Record. Why June Could Change Everything.
Apple's stock reached a record close of $287.51 each on Wednesday, its first record since December after starting the year in a bit of a rut. New management is on its way in for the iPhone maker, and there's more it has to prove in just a few short weeks to keep investor sentiment on the up and up.
-- A major concern has been that Apple has fallen behind on its artificial
intelligence updates, keeping some would-be investors on the sidelines.
Wall Street and consumers are waiting for an AI-powered Siri chatbot to
be released. Apple says a more personalized Siri is coming to users "this
year."
-- Other company updates have helped boost the stock recently. Shares rose
3.2% on May 1 after Apple beat second-quarter expectations and gave
strong revenue guidance for the June quarter. That guidance was
especially important as consumer confidence comes into question amid
sticky inflation and rising gasoline prices.
-- Apple also announced on April 21 that current CEO Tim Cook will be
stepping down, and John Ternus, currently Apple's senior vice president
of hardware engineering, will succeed him in September. The stock's
rebound signals that investors are confident in what Apple will look like
under Ternus's leadership.
-- Wall Street should also be prepared for what's ahead. Apple is kicking
off its Worldwide Developers Conference on June 8. This is a crucial
event every year that Apple uses as a platform to announce software and
development updates. It was at WWDC 2024 where Apple first unveiled Apple
Intelligence.
What's Next: Two years later, investors are still waiting for this tech to wow. "Apple is executing very well into a big event that should help change the narrative," says Melius Research analyst Ben Reitzes.
-- Angela Palumbo
CEO of FanDuel's Parent Is All-In on Prediction Markets
Flutter Entertainment, parent of U.S. sportsbook FanDuel, is well situated for opportunities like the World Cup, likely to be the largest betting event in history. But it looks equally vulnerable to challenges like prediction markets in the U.S. that closely mimic sports betting but beyond state regulators' reach.
-- Its quarterly earnings were affected by Flutter's investments in its own
prediction-market platform called FanDuel Predicts, which started last
quarter in Texas and California, the biggest states where traditional
sports betting is still illegal. Revenue from the business was
"non-material."
-- CEO Peter Jackson told Barron's in an interview that FanDuel Predicts is
more about onboarding customers in states where traditional online sports
betting may eventually be legalized. Apart from FanDuel Predicts, Flutter
has also begun market-making activities on a rival prediction-market
platform.
-- This effectively makes Flutter the counterparty in certain prediction
market trades. It would mark an evolution for prediction markets, which
have traditionally set themselves apart from FanDuel and other
sportsbooks because there is no "house." Now the house -- in this case
Flutter -- is getting involved.
-- Flutter's market-making is mainly in prediction-market parlays, Jackson
says, where bettors link together multiple discrete bets that generate a
big payout if each bet proves correct. Parlays are a bread-and-butter
product for sportsbooks.
What's Next: For the first quarter, Flutter reported adjusted earnings of $1.22 a share and revenue of $4.3 billion, up 17% and beating expectations. But earnings were down 22%, and Flutter lowered its full-year outlook, expecting revenue of $18.31 billion, just below expectations.
-- Nick Devor
Higher Gasoline Prices Could Weigh on Consumer Spending
Consumers are cutting back on how much they're spending to fill up their gas tanks these days, and most household budgets are still getting walloped by higher prices. It could be an ominous sign for consumer spending, especially if gasoline remains above $4 a gallon through the summer, as futures prices suggest.
-- Household spending on gasoline rose more than 15% in March, while
households pulled back on inflation-adjusted consumption by 3%, according
to the latest analysis released Wednesday by the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York. The impact of higher gas prices fell hardest on lower-income
Americans, threatening to further exacerbate inequities among income
groups.
-- Until recently, Americans shouldered higher gasoline prices without
reducing their overall spending, mostly by relying on savings and higher
average tax refunds as a cushion. National average gasoline prices have
risen from under $3 a gallon in late February to more than $4.50 a gallon
this week, AAA says.
-- Lower-income households are hard-hit. Those earning less than $40,000 a
year spent 12% more on gas in March. That spending jump might have been
more if this cohort hadn't also significantly cut back on their real gas
consumption by 7% -- the biggest pullback across income groups.
-- Households with incomes between $40,000 and $125,000, meanwhile, spent
nearly 15% more at gas stations in March, but only cut their usage by
4.8%. Households earning over $125,000 barely cut gas consumption and
spent almost 19% more on gasoline in March.
What's Next: Americans aren't just cutting back on gasoline. Appliance maker Whirlpool cut its full-year earnings guidance in half as consumer confidence takes a nose dive. Executives said the war and affordability concerns are making people more cautious about big-ticket purchases.
-- Megan Leonhardt and Liz Moyer
Warsh's 3-Part Plan Could Prove His Fed Critics Wrong
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May 07, 2026 06:48 ET (10:48 GMT)
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