NEW YORK, April 22, 2026 — U.S. equity markets opened on a firmer footing Wednesday morning after S&P 500 futures added 0.55% in pre-market trade, with Nasdaq 100 futures advancing 0.73% and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rising approximately 207 points, or 0.44%, following President Donald Trump’s extension of the U.S.–Iran ceasefire. The move provided a meaningful lift to risk sentiment after the S&P 500 closed at 7,064.01 on Tuesday — its fourth consecutive losing session — while the Nasdaq Composite settled at 24,259.96, off 0.59%.

The ceasefire extension removed, at least temporarily, the most acute geopolitical tail risk that had weighed on markets since Iran’s Strait of Hormuz actions earlier in the week. As covered in PreMarket Daily’s dedicated ceasefire briefing, futures climbed to approximately 7,103 on the S&P 500 before the cash open with no concurrent economic data catalyst, leaving geopolitics as the dominant driver of early price action.

Opening bell standout — Vertiv (VRT): Q1 2026 earnings before the bell

Data centre infrastructure group Vertiv Holdings (NYSE: VRT) reported first-quarter 2026 results before Wednesday’s open, with Wall Street analysts having set the bar at $1.02 in earnings per share and $2.64 billion in revenue, according to consensus estimates compiled on Yahoo Finance. A conference call was scheduled for 11:00 a.m. ET Wednesday, giving management the opportunity to provide forward guidance on data centre buildout demand — a metric closely watched given Vertiv’s role supplying power and thermal management systems to hyperscale operators.

Vertiv shares had been under pressure in recent sessions alongside the broader market’s pullback, making the earnings print a pivotal catalyst for the stock’s near-term direction. Any commentary on order book momentum and capacity expansion timelines was expected to dominate early institutional flow into the name.

Data Visual
S&P 500 Daily Close — Five Sessions
Five-session S&P 500 closing performance shows the index’s trajectory heading into the April 22 open.
S&P 500 Daily Close — Five Sessions
Values in %

Opening bell standout — Intel (INTC): HSBC’s $95 target meets $0.01 EPS reality

Intel Corporation (NASDAQ: INTC) remained among the most watched single-stock stories at Wednesday’s open, sitting at the intersection of a high-conviction analyst call and a looming earnings event. HSBC analyst Frank Lee upgraded Intel to Buy from Hold earlier this week, lifting his price target to $95 from $50 — a move that placed his target nearly double the Street consensus of $52.26, with 33 analysts maintaining a Hold rating on the stock.

Lee’s thesis centres on a projected 20% year-over-year increase in server CPU shipments by 2026, compounded by an anticipated 20% rise in average selling prices driven by supply constraints — a combination the analyst argues could deliver material earnings upside well beyond current Street models. The upgrade arrives, however, on the eve of Intel’s Q1 2026 earnings report, scheduled for Thursday, April 23, where analysts expect a near-breakeven result of just $0.01 in earnings per share on revenue of $12.39 billion. The gap between HSBC’s structural optimism and the consensus’s muted near-term outlook made INTC’s opening volume a key data point for gauging whether institutional desks were positioning ahead of the print or fading the upgrade.

Key Stat
$95 vs $52.26
HSBC’s Intel price target sits 82% above the Street consensus of $52.26 — the widest single-analyst dispersion on the stock in recent memory, heading into Thursday’s Q1 earnings report.
Analyst Note
“We anticipate a 20% year-over-year increase in server CPU shipments by 2026, alongside a 20% rise in average selling prices due to supply constraints” — HSBC analyst Frank Lee, in the firm’s Intel upgrade note, raising the price target to $95 from $50. The average Street target remains $52.26 with 33 Hold ratings, per Yahoo Finance analyst data.
Data Visual
Intel Price Targets — Analyst vs HSBC
Comparison of Intel analyst price targets illustrates the wide dispersion between HSBC’s outlier $95 target and Street consensus.
Intel Price Targets — Analyst vs HSBC
Values in $

Volume and price action — how the first 15 minutes traded

The opening 15 minutes of Wednesday’s session were shaped by a clear risk-on posture, with the geopolitical relief trade evident across index ETFs tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq. Futures had pointed to an open near the 7,103 level on the S&P 500, implying a recovery of roughly half the ground lost in Tuesday’s 0.63% decline from the prior session’s close of 7,064.01.

Early price action in technology names — particularly those tied to semiconductor supply chains — reflected the dual catalysts of the ceasefire extension and the Intel upgrade narrative. Bid-ask spreads on large-cap tech names tightened in the opening minutes, consistent with institutional participation rather than retail-dominated momentum. Options market activity around Intel ahead of Thursday’s earnings had been elevated in pre-market hours, suggesting a degree of hedging activity alongside directional positioning.

Energy-linked equities, which had been notable outperformers during the Strait of Hormuz disruption period, showed early softness as crude oil prices retreated from recent highs following the ceasefire extension — a rotation consistent with geopolitical risk premium being unwound. The broader market’s opening tone was constructive but measured, with traders cognisant that the ceasefire represented an extension rather than a resolution, and that the next round of decisions on Iran policy remained a live variable. For additional context on Tuesday’s session dynamics, PreMarket Daily’s April 21 market close report provides the full prior-day price action breakdown.

Institutional vs retail signals at the open

Block-size order flow in the opening minutes on index ETFs was consistent with institutional re-engagement after several sessions of defensive positioning. The S&P 500’s technical support zone near the 50-day moving average, just under 6,770, remained well below current levels, as noted by MarketWatch technical analysis — a factor that reduced urgency around protective downside positioning and allowed long-only managers to participate in the early bid without aggressive hedging against near-term support breaks.

What to watch in the first hour

The first hour of Wednesday’s session carried several specific price levels and event triggers that defined the tape’s character heading into midday.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 futures open level ~7,103 Sustained hold above 7,100 signals broad risk appetite returning after four-session losing streak
S&P 500 prior close 7,064.01 A failure to hold above this level intraday would signal the ceasefire relief trade has been fully faded
S&P 500 50-day moving average ~6,770 Key technical support; a move toward this level would signal a significant deterioration in near-term sentiment
Intel (INTC) HSBC target $95.00 Early-hour volume and direction in INTC signals whether the market is pricing HSBC’s thesis ahead of Thursday’s Q1 earnings
Vertiv (VRT) Q1 EPS consensus $1.02 A beat with raised guidance supports data centre infrastructure demand narrative; a miss pressures the broader AI infrastructure trade

Beyond these levels, the Vertiv conference call at 11:00 a.m. ET represented the most significant intraday fundamental catalyst for the session. Management commentary on backlog, lead times, and forward demand from hyperscale customers was expected to carry implications not just for VRT but for the broader data centre supply chain, including power, cooling, and connectivity names.

Intel’s positioning ahead of Thursday also meant that any unusual options activity or dark pool prints in INTC during the first hour would be scrutinised closely for directional signals. The stock’s earnings implied move — derivable from at-the-money straddle pricing — would be a key reference point for traders evaluating how much of Thursday’s event risk was already embedded in Wednesday’s opening price.

First-hour context and session framework

Wednesday’s opening framework was defined by a geopolitical relief bid layered over a market that had spent four sessions under pressure. The S&P 500’s close of 7,064.01 on April 21 reflected cumulative losses tied primarily to Iran-related risk, and the ceasefire extension offered a logical catalyst for short-covering and incremental long-side re-engagement. The PreMarket Daily roundup for April 22 noted that the VIX held 19.50 in pre-market hours — a level that remained elevated relative to the year’s lows but had retreated from the acute stress readings of the prior week, consistent with a market pricing in reduced — rather than eliminated — geopolitical uncertainty.

The session’s first hour was not without complicating factors. The ceasefire extension was framed as a response to Tehran’s “seriously fractured” government, language that implied ongoing instability rather than a durable diplomatic resolution. Energy market participants monitoring crude oil’s trajectory after recent Hormuz-related spikes would be watching whether the relief rally in risk assets was accompanied by a sustained pullback in oil prices — a combination that would validate the geopolitical risk premium thesis rather than suggest a fundamental demand shift.

For traders and analysts tracking the market’s week-long arc, Tuesday’s opening bell report, in which UNH surged 6.3% to $344.10 on a $111.7 billion revenue beat, provided useful context on how single-stock earnings catalysts had intersected with the broader geopolitical tape. Wednesday’s equivalent focal points — Vertiv’s Q1 print and Intel’s pre-earnings positioning — carried the potential for similarly concentrated price action in the first hour of trading.

The S&P 500’s technical picture remained one in which 7,100 had emerged as a near-term inflection point: a sustained hold above it on Wednesday would establish the level as new support and shift attention toward earnings-season momentum; a failure below it, particularly on above-average volume, would draw renewed focus toward the 6,770 moving average support and questions about whether the ceasefire rally had constituted a short-covering event rather than a durable sentiment shift. First-hour price action on broad-market ETFs, combined with the Vertiv conference call at 11:00 a.m., would set the tone for the remainder of Wednesday’s session.


This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

James Whitfield is a pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily with a focus on overnight futures, early session movers, and the catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. He tracks S&P 500,...