Overview:
S&P 500 hit 7,259.22 for a record close Tuesday, led by a 2% technology sector gain and a VIX decline to 17.38. AMD's Q1 data center revenue of $5.78 billion — up 57% year-over-year — headlined after-hours earnings, with Q2 guidance of $11.2 billion well above the $10.52 billion Street consensus. Shopify cratered 15.7% on soft Q2 revenue guidance while Palantir slid despite reporting a record quarter, signaling that execution alone is no longer enough in a market priced for perfection.
NEW YORK — Records fell across the board Tuesday, but the engine behind them was unmistakable: the AI semiconductor trade roared back with a conviction that briefly made geopolitical risk look like a footnote.
NEW YORK, May 5, 2026 — The S&P 500 closed at 7,259.22 (+0.81%), the Nasdaq Composite at 25,326.13 (+1.03%), the Dow Jones Industrial Average at 49,298.25 (+0.73%, +356.35 points), and the Russell 2000 posted a new intraday record with a gain of 1.75%. Advancing issues outnumbered decliners 59.7% to 36.3% across U.S. markets — 3,324 stocks up, 2,021 down — while 314 of the S&P 500’s holdings advanced against 189 declining.
The Ceasefire Trade Meets the Chip Earnings Cycle
Tuesday’s session had two distinct catalysts, and they reinforced each other with unusual precision. First, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth confirmed that the U.S.-Iran ceasefire “certainly holds” despite Monday’s Iranian missile strikes on UAE energy infrastructure. That single statement punctured the oil fear trade. WTI crude fell 3.9% to $102.27 and Brent dropped 3.99% to $109.87 — the kind of single-session energy selloff that functions as an implicit rate cut for industrial and consumer spending. The VIX dropped 4.98% to 17.38, erasing Monday’s anxiety premium almost entirely.
Second, AMD delivered earnings after the close that validated the AI infrastructure thesis in hard numbers — a topic we’ve been tracking in the context of whether big tech earnings can justify record valuations. The combination — geopolitical relief plus semiconductor earnings confirmation — gave institutional desks the all-clear to extend exposure into record territory.
What the session didn’t offer was uniform participation. Communication services finished as the only sector in the red. Shopify cratered. Palantir, which reported a record quarter, still fell as much as 6.85% because the market had priced in guidance above what the company delivered. That gap between strong execution and elevated expectation is a pattern worth watching as earnings season deepens.
Chips, Miners, and the Stocks That Actually Moved the Tape
Intel’s 14% surge was the session’s most eye-catching move. Reports of a renewed Apple chip partnership gave Intel a narrative it has badly needed — a credible path back into premium silicon after years of process-node missteps. Whether the partnership materializes at the scale implied by today’s move remains an open question, but the market voted decisively.
Micron crossed a $700 billion market cap, up 10.95% on the session, extending a year-to-date gain that now stands near 700%. That kind of move demands a clear-eyed reality check: Micron’s advance is pricing a memory cycle recovery that the company’s own guidance has not yet confirmed in explicit terms. Momentum can sustain dislocations for longer than seems rational, but traders should treat MU’s entry point with more discipline than the chart alone suggests.
Cipher Mining jumped 23.53% after announcing the Mirantis acquisition, pivoting its business model toward AI and high-performance computing with a $200 million credit facility backing the move. Iren gained 10.61% on its own Mirantis deal — an all-stock acquisition valued at approximately $625 million. Riot Platforms added 8.91%. The crypto-infrastructure-to-AI pivot trade is now a crowded corner of the market, and the Mirantis name appearing in two separate announcements on the same day deserves scrutiny rather than celebration. We’ve examined whether recent rallies reflect genuine re-rating or simply macro relief — Tuesday’s crypto miner moves fall firmly in the latter category until revenue follows.
On the downside, Shopify’s 15.7% decline stood out. The company’s cautious Q2 revenue outlook reminded traders that consumer-facing e-commerce is operating in a different demand environment than enterprise AI infrastructure. Shopify’s guidance miss wasn’t catastrophic in absolute terms, but in a market where multiple compression is swift and unforgiving for growth names that disappoint, the selloff was proportionate. Duolingo fell 13% on monthly active users missing estimates — another data point suggesting that consumer engagement metrics are softening even as enterprise technology accelerates.
Pinterest gained 7% after Q2 revenue guidance of $1.13–1.15 billion beat the $1.11 billion consensus, a result that looks solid until you ask what the ad market would need to do for Pinterest to sustain that trajectory into a slower consumer backdrop.
The Macro Layer That Traders Are Underpricing
March JOLTS data showed job openings at 6.87 million — slightly above the 6.8 million consensus, down 56,000 from February. Hiring rose 655,000 to 5.55 million, and the hiring rate climbed 0.4 percentage points to 3.5%. On the surface, a labor market that is cooling gradually without breaking. The concern lives in the April Services PMI’s New Orders Index, which fell 7.1 points — the weakest reading in several months. New orders are a leading indicator; employment is lagging. Whether that ISM services miss is enough to shift bond market positioning is a question that didn’t get answered today — equities were too busy celebrating oil’s collapse to engage with the services demand signal.
The trade deficit for March came in at $60.3 billion, below the $60.9 billion consensus estimate. Exports climbed 12% while imports fell 9.1% — a data profile consistent with front-running behavior ahead of tariff implementation rather than structural export strength. The annual deficit fell $211.2 billion year-over-year, a figure that flatters the headline without resolving the underlying demand distortion.
Pfizer reported Q1 adjusted EPS of $0.75 against a $0.72 consensus, with revenue of $14.5 billion beating the $13.84 billion estimate. Excluding COVID products, revenue grew 7% operationally. The company reaffirmed full-year adjusted EPS guidance of $2.80–$3.00 and revenue of $59.5–$62.5 billion. The stock added 2.2% in regular trading — a quiet beat in a session where quiet beats were overshadowed by chip explosions.
What Wednesday’s Open Needs to Confirm
AMD’s after-hours move of +5% on Q2 guidance of $11.2 billion — versus the $10.52 billion Street expectation — sets up a constructive open for semiconductor names Wednesday. The question is whether that strength broadens or stays concentrated. Devon Energy’s after-hours earnings will also set the tone for energy positioning. If DVN delivers, it tests Raymond James’s 40% upside thesis in real time and gives the energy sector a narrative to work with beyond crude price reaction.
The ceasefire’s durability is the overnight tail risk. Pentagon assurances bought Tuesday’s rally. A second missile incident — or any signal that the Strait of Hormuz transit pause is unraveling — reverses oil’s decline and challenges the inflation-relief logic that underpinned today’s record close. Traders should treat WTI’s $102 level as the geopolitical gauge: a close back above $106 changes the conversation.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 support | 7,200 | Break below signals relief rally exhaustion, not a re-rating |
| WTI Crude geopolitical gauge | $106 | Close back above flips inflation-relief thesis and pressures equities |
| AMD after-hours move | +5% | Sets constructive tone for semis Wednesday; watch for gap-fill if broad market fades |
| Devon Energy (DVN) earnings | After-hours | Tests Raymond James $72 price target thesis; key read for energy sector direction |
| ISM Services New Orders | 53.5% (–7.1 pts) | Weakest in months; watch whether bond market prices this as a leading demand warning |
Tuesday’s record close is real — but the breadth data and the guidance-miss carnage in growth names suggest the market’s tolerance for disappointment is thinner than the index level implies. AMD’s blowout and Intel’s Apple news can sustain the tape through Wednesday’s open. Whether the rally holds into the back half of the week depends on two things the Pentagon cannot control: the next earnings batch, and the next satellite image from the Strait of Hormuz.
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.

