More tech-led gains across Wall Street
US stock index futures came under concerted selling pressure in early trade yesterday. This was enough to take both the S&P 500 and Dow Jones contracts down to their lowest points for the week. But all the majors subsequently recovered from their lows as the session progressed and then shot higher soon after the US open.
The catalyst for the rally was a report from Axios saying that the US and Iran had reached a deal which would include an extension to the current ceasefire. All it now required was President Trump’s approval. Quite what an extension to a ceasefire means when it was already ‘extended indefinitely’ back on 21st April is anyone’s guess.
But in fairness, it was conditional on Iran making ‘progress’ in talks, so perhaps that’s what we’ve got. The most immediate concern for investors is unblocking the Strait of Hormuz. So, they will respond positively to any suggestion that ‘progress’ is being made in this regard.
All the US majors ended yesterday’s session in positive territory, with the NASDAQ. S&P 500 and Russell 2000 closing at fresh record highs.

Source: TN Trader
Tech was a major contributor to the positive session, and many chip stocks have continued to rally this morning. Dell has helped to keep sentiment buoyant. It released results after the close, which beat expectations, and it also provided a strong revenue forecast. The stock was up 38% this morning.
Yesterday, Snowflake did something similar when it jumped around 36% following better-than-expected earnings and revenues, along with strong forward guidance.
Going into the weekend, investors appear quite sanguine over the ongoing war between the US and Iran, convinced that it will soon be over. The only question will be: has the war made the situation better or worse for the world overall? Aside from this, AI-adjacent tech continues at the vanguard of the current rally off the March lows.
There’s no sign of exhaustion currently, and all the major US indices are trading well above significant support. But the higher these markets go, the thinner the atmosphere.



















