Overview:

All four major U.S. equity benchmarks traded firmly higher at midday on April 22, 2026, with the Russell 2000 leading the advance at +1.05% to 2,793.99 and the Dow Jones Industrial Average reclaiming 405.73 points to 49,555.11. The primary catalyst was President Trump's post-close announcement indefinitely extending the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, reversing Tuesday's geopolitical anxiety even as Iran's Revolutionary Guard attacked three vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. GE Vernova's 8% surge on raised f

NEW YORK, April 22, 2026 — U.S. equity markets mounted a decisive midday rebound on Wednesday, with the S&P 500 rising 53.80 points, or 0.76%, to 7,117.81 at 1:30 PM ET, the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding 405.73 points, or 0.83%, to 49,555.11, the Nasdaq Composite advancing 0.93% to 24,486.61, and the Russell 2000 leading the pack with a 1.05% gain to 2,793.99. The moves represent a clean reversal of Tuesday’s broad retreat, when the S&P 500 shed 0.63% to close at 7,064.01, the Dow lost 293.18 points, and the Nasdaq settled 0.59% lower — losses stemming from geopolitical uncertainty that was, at least partially, resolved after the closing bell. As detailed in PreMarket Daily’s opening bell report for April 22, futures had already signalled a firmer session following President Trump’s ceasefire announcement.

What is driving the tape

The dominant macro catalyst of the session is diplomatic rather than economic. President Trump announced late Tuesday that the United States would indefinitely extend the U.S.-Iran ceasefire, a day before the agreement was due to expire, as Reuters reported on ongoing peace-process developments. The announcement arrived after Pakistan had been slated to host a second round of talks, plans that were suspended after the White House cancelled Vice President JD Vance’s trip to Islamabad following Iran’s refusal to re-engage in negotiations.

The diplomatic signal was nonetheless sufficient to unlock risk appetite, even as Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard attacked three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday — an act of aggression that simultaneously underpinned a 2.13% rise in crude oil to $91.58 per barrel and kept safe-haven demand alive, with gold advancing 1.14% to $4,773.40. The tension in the oil market is a live counterweight to the equity rally; traders are effectively pricing a ceasefire extension without full de-escalation, a distinction that matters for energy-sector positioning and inflation expectations alike.

The earnings narrative has provided meaningful support alongside the geopolitical reprieve. With most companies reporting so far this season exceeding both profit and revenue consensus estimates, the fundamental backdrop remains constructive even as the forward 12-month P/E ratio for the S&P 500 sits at 20.9 — above the five-year average of 19.9, according to FactSet data. The PreMarket Daily ceasefire and futures briefing published this morning outlined the absence of a scheduled U.S. economic data release today, meaning earnings and geopolitics are carrying the full weight of price discovery.

Data Visual
Major indices midday gain/loss %
Compares percentage change across all four major U.S. indices at 1:30 PM ET on April 22, 2026, versus Tuesday’s close.
Major indices midday gain/loss %
Values in %
Key Stat
$695 billion
Boeing’s record total backlog as of Q1 2026, including more than 6,100 commercial aircraft — the largest order book in the company’s history and a forward-demand signal for the industrials sector.

Standout midday movers

Top gainer: GE Vernova (GEV) +8%

GE Vernova surged approximately 8% in early trading and held the bulk of those gains into midday after the power-equipment manufacturer reported quarterly earnings and revenue that surpassed Wall Street’s consensus estimates and simultaneously raised its fiscal 2026 guidance. As Reuters reported, the strength was concentrated in heavy demand from data centres for power infrastructure — a theme that has defined the AI-infrastructure build-out and one that continues to generate outsized pricing power for industrial suppliers operating in that supply chain. GE Vernova’s performance positions it among the most significant single-stock contributors to the S&P 500’s midday advance.

Notable gainer: Boeing (BA)

Boeing added to the positive industrial tone, reporting quarterly revenue of $22.22 billion — up 14% year-over-year and ahead of Wall Street estimates of $21.78 billion, according to CNBC. Total backlog rose to a record $695 billion, encompassing more than 6,100 commercial aircraft. The figures represent a substantive operational recovery narrative for the aerospace manufacturer after an extended period of production and regulatory turbulence.

Notable gainer: United Airlines (UAL) +~1.5%

United Airlines gained roughly 1.5% after quarterly results cleared Wall Street’s average earnings and revenue bar, though the advance was tempered by second-quarter earnings-per-share guidance that came in below the FactSet consensus. The carrier guided for flat to 2% annual capacity growth in the third and fourth quarters, down from 3.4% growth recorded in Q1, as high fuel costs constrain expansion ambitions. Full-year guidance was broadly in line with consensus.

Laggard: Best Buy (BBY)

Best Buy shares traded lower after the consumer electronics retailer announced that Jason Bonfig — a 27-year company veteran currently serving as chief customer, product, and fulfillment officer — will succeed Corie Barry as chief executive on October 31. Barry, who has led the company since 2019, will remain as a strategic advisor for six months following her departure. The leadership transition compounds an already cautious analyst stance: Goldman Sachs analyst Kate McShane earlier this month double-downgraded Best Buy to Sell from Buy, cutting the price target to $59 from $76.

Corporate deal: Palantir Technologies (PLTR)

Palantir Technologies announced a $300 million contract with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, with the data-analytics company’s software to be deployed to improve service delivery for farmers and government field staff under the National Farm Security Action Plan. The agreement extends Palantir’s existing work on the USDA’s Landmark platform, which supported the rollout of the $11 billion Farmer Bridge Assistance Program in February.

Data Visual
Key asset midday price levels
Midday price readings for crude oil, gold (÷10 for scale), and Bitcoin (÷100 for scale) at 1:30 PM ET on April 22, 2026.
Key asset midday price levels
Values in $

Sector rotation check

Wednesday’s session is exhibiting broad-based participation rather than narrow leadership, with all major S&P 500 sectors trading in positive territory at midday. The industrials sector is an outperformer, anchored by GE Vernova’s earnings-driven surge and Boeing’s revenue beat. Technology is contributing meaningfully to Nasdaq outperformance, supported in part by HSBC’s upgrade of Intel (INTC) to Buy, in which analysts cited CPU server demand as a near-term catalyst and set a revenue estimate of $14.2 billion for Q2 2026 — 9% above the Street consensus of $13.1 billion.

Energy is a notable split story: the sector benefits from crude’s 2.13% advance to $91.58, driven by Hormuz tension, but investors are simultaneously conscious that elevated oil prices feed through to airline and consumer-goods cost structures. Consumer discretionary is lagging at the margin, partly reflecting Best Buy’s leadership-transition pressure and broader caution around discretionary spending resilience in a high-energy-cost environment.

Small-caps, as measured by the Russell 2000’s 1.05% gain, are outpacing large-cap benchmarks — a rotation signal that, if sustained into the close, would suggest improving risk appetite beyond the mega-cap technology cohort. The bottom-up analyst consensus price target for the S&P 500 sits at 8,325.60, implying 18.2% upside from Tuesday’s close, with Information Technology (+23.4% implied upside) and Health Care (+22.8%) carrying the highest sector-level return expectations, per FactSet.

Analyst Note
“We expect server CPU upside to start to manifest in [the second quarter of 2026] as our revenue estimate of $14.2 billion is 9% higher than consensus at $13.1 billion,” HSBC analysts wrote Tuesday in upgrading Intel (INTC) to Buy, identifying data-centre infrastructure demand as a near-term earnings catalyst for the chipmaker. — HSBC equity research, April 21, 2026.

What to watch into the close

With no scheduled U.S. economic data on the calendar, the afternoon session will be governed by three variables: headline flow from the Strait of Hormuz, the durability of the ceasefire extension narrative, and any late-session institutional rebalancing. As covered in PreMarket Daily’s premarket roundup, the VIX opened the session near 19.50 and has since declined to 19.15, a constructive directional signal — though a reading still elevated relative to historical norms, indicating the options market retains a meaningful geopolitical risk premium.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 midday level 7,117.81 Hold above 7,100 signals conviction; a slip below opens a retest of Tuesday’s 7,064 close.
VIX 19.15 Sustained decline toward 18 would confirm risk-on rotation; spike above 21 would flag renewed geopolitical anxiety.
Crude oil (WTI) $91.58 Further Hormuz incidents could push toward $95; easing tensions could unwind the session’s energy premium.
Gold spot price $4,773.40 Concurrent equity and gold gains indicate hedged positioning; a gold pullback would reinforce pure risk-on conviction.
Russell 2000 vs S&P 500 +1.05% vs +0.76% Small-cap outperformance signals broadening participation; a reversal of this spread into the close would narrow the rally’s base.

The afternoon also carries an after-hours earnings slate that will shape Thursday’s open. Any Hormuz-related headline — whether additional vessel incidents or a diplomatic response from Washington — carries the capacity to move crude oil and equity futures rapidly, given the tight ceasefire extension narrative that is currently underpinning risk sentiment. The session’s macro context is reviewed in full in the April 21 market close report, which documented how ceasefire dynamics have shaped the tape across consecutive sessions.

Bitcoin’s 4.29% advance to $78,926.75 at midday merits monitoring as a supplementary risk appetite barometer. The digital asset has tracked the broader risk-on / risk-off cycle closely in recent weeks, and its outperformance relative to equities today may reflect either crypto-specific flows or a leading signal of improving speculative appetite. Bloomberg’s markets desk has noted the renewed correlation between crypto and macro risk indicators across the current geopolitical cycle.

The afternoon setup into Wednesday’s close is constructive but conditional. Broad index participation, a declining VIX, and an earnings season that continues to deliver above-consensus results provide the structural foundation for further gains. Against that, crude oil’s session advance, ongoing Hormuz aggression by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard, and an elevated forward P/E ratio of 20.9 relative to the five-year average of 19.9 underscore that the market is priced for a continued diplomatic de-escalation — one that remains incomplete. The tape’s direction through the final 90 minutes of regular trading will likely hinge less on any scheduled release and more on whether the ceasefire extension narrative holds without a material geopolitical deterioration before the 4:00 PM ET bell.


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,...