Overview:
Wolfspeed shares opened up 23% to $65.95 on May 13, 2026, after Citrini Research called the power chip manufacturer a 'crouching tiger' poised to capitalize on AI infrastructure demand. The S&P 500 opened at 7,414 (+0.18%), the Nasdaq at 26,087 (+0.12%), and the Dow slipped 0.48% at the bell. WOLF traded in a wide $61.52–$73.54 range in early action, signaling high conviction but also elevated two-way risk for momentum traders.
NEW YORK — Wolfspeed shares exploded 23% at Wednesday’s open, briefly hitting $65.95, after independent research firm Citrini named the power semiconductor maker its top single-stock pick in AI infrastructure — a call that landed on a tape already grinding cautiously higher.
A Narrow Open on an Index That Has Already Moved
The S&P 500 opened Wednesday at approximately 7,414, adding 0.18% from Tuesday’s close of 7,400.96. The Nasdaq Composite opened at 26,087, up 0.12%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average lagged, slipping 0.48% at the bell — a split that tells you the early session bid is concentrated in technology and growth, not the broad cyclical exposure that drove last week’s trade-truce rally.
That trade truce remains the macro backdrop. As PreMarket Daily reported, the US-China tariff pause lit a strong rally, but markets are now in the phase where traders ask how much of that reprieve is already priced. Wednesday’s narrow opening gains suggest the answer is: quite a lot. The S&P has moved more than 10% off its April lows, and without a fresh catalyst — earnings, Fed guidance, or another trade headline — the index is running on momentum rather than fundamental acceleration.
Opening Bell Standout — Wolfspeed (WOLF)
Wolfspeed opened Wednesday as the session’s defining single-stock story. WOLF shares gapped up from a prior close near $53.72, printing as high as $65.95 before the opening bell and trading in an early range between $61.52 and $73.54. By mid-morning the stock was settling around $64.78 — still up sharply, but well off the session peak, a classic pattern for gap-up trades where early enthusiasm collides with profit-taking from holders who bought during the bankruptcy restructuring period.
The catalyst was a note from Citrini Research, an independent investment firm that named Wolfspeed its “single-stock highlight” in AI infrastructure. The firm argued the company’s post-bankruptcy positioning is “perfect” for the coming wave of power semiconductor demand driven by AI data centers, describing WOLF as a “crouching tiger getting ready to reveal a dragon.” No traditional sell-side rating change accompanied the move — this was pure research-driven momentum, which means the floor beneath it is softer than it appears.
Wolfspeed’s story is genuinely compelling on fundamentals if you accept the thesis. Silicon carbide semiconductors are positioned at the intersection of EV powertrain demand and high-efficiency AI data center power management — two of the largest secular growth vectors in hardware right now. The company exited bankruptcy with a cleaner balance sheet and shed legacy liabilities that had weighed on the equity for years. As PreMarket Daily has tracked, chipmakers broadly have shouldered an outsized share of this year’s index gains, and Wolfspeed’s move fits that pattern. But fitting a pattern and sustaining a 23% gap are two different things.
What the First 15 Minutes Actually Said
The opening 15 minutes in WOLF were textbook gap-and-volatile: a surge toward $73.54, then a quick fade as early sellers — likely pre-bankruptcy creditors who received equity in the restructuring — took the gift. The stock found footing above $61.52 and stabilized near $64.78, which is approximately a 20.6% gain on the prior close. That kind of intraday giveback from peak to stabilization suggests mixed hands. Retail momentum buyers chased the opening print; more disciplined capital waited for the first pullback before adding exposure.
On the broader indexes, the Dow’s underperformance at the open — down 0.48% while the Nasdaq added 0.12% — is a subtle signal worth tracking. Dow components skew toward industrials, financials, and consumer names that are more directly exposed to the trade policy uncertainty that has not fully resolved. The Nasdaq’s outperformance, by contrast, reflects the market’s continued willingness to pay for technology growth even at elevated multiples. That divergence has been a persistent feature of 2026 trading, and Wednesday’s open reinforces it rather than challenging it. As we have covered in our ongoing S&P 500 level analysis, the 7,400 area was a key test — the market cleared it, but the margin is thin enough that one bad data print could flip it quickly.
Inflation remains the shadow hanging over the session. April’s CPI data came in softer than feared, providing the immediate backdrop for this week’s equity strength, but the Fed has made clear that a single month of moderation is not a policy trigger. Traders pressing the long side at these index levels are making a sequential bet: benign CPI, cooperative PPI, trade truce holds, and the Fed stays patient. Remove any one of those conditions and the math changes sharply.
The Level That Separates a Trade from a Trend
For WOLF specifically, the session structure has drawn a clear map. Three levels define the day:
First, $73.54 is the intraday high and now acts as resistance. A push back above it — particularly on heavy volume in the second half of the session — would indicate that institutional buyers absorbed the early supply and are bidding again. That would be a genuine signal of accumulation, not noise.
Second, $64.78 is the current midday anchor. Holding above this level into the close would set up a constructive weekly chart structure — a large-range up candle on significant volume that technical traders will use as a reference point for next week’s positioning.
Third, $61.52 is the line in the sand. A break below that level, especially in the final 90 minutes of trading, would tell you the gap is failing — that sellers are in control and the Citrini note is being treated as a liquidity event rather than a conviction catalyst. That scenario is more likely than the bulls want to admit, particularly given that broader market conditions are not providing a strong risk-on tailwind today.
For the S&P 500, the question is whether 7,414 holds into the afternoon or whether the Dow’s weakness bleeds into the broader index as the session matures. Watch the 7,395–7,400 zone — that is where Tuesday’s weakness found selling pressure and where the index needs to stay above to maintain its technical posture. A break back below 7,400 before the close would be a minor but measurable negative, particularly ahead of any additional Fed commentary or economic data due later this week. Also worth monitoring: the wholesale inflation picture that continues to frame the Fed’s sequencing calculus through mid-year.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| WOLF intraday resistance | $73.54 | Reclaim above this on volume = institutional accumulation confirmed; first real upside target |
| WOLF midday anchor | $64.78 | Holding above into close sets constructive weekly structure; losing it raises gap-fill risk |
| WOLF critical support | $61.52 | Break below = gap failing; sellers in control, momentum buyers likely exit fast |
| S&P 500 support zone | 7,395–7,400 | Close below 7,400 weakens near-term technical structure; key level ahead of any Fed commentary |
| Dow divergence watch | -0.48% open | Widening Dow/Nasdaq spread signals risk appetite is narrow, not broad — watch if cyclicals recover by midday |
One Session Doesn’t Make a Thesis
Wolfspeed’s Wednesday surge will generate headlines and it deserves attention — but one session on one boutique research call is not a verdict on the company’s post-bankruptcy trajectory. The silicon carbide thesis is real. AI data center power demand is real. What is not yet confirmed is whether Wolfspeed’s manufacturing capacity, customer pipeline, and execution track record post-restructuring are sufficient to justify sustained re-rating at these levels. Those are questions a 23% gap cannot answer.
For index traders, Wednesday’s open is a low-drama continuation of the post-CPI, post-trade-truce grind. The S&P 500 is holding above 7,400, the Nasdaq is leading, and there are no immediate macro landmines on the calendar today. Broader global markets are similarly constructive but unexcited. The session will be defined by whether WOLF’s early surge fades into a distribution day or firms into genuine accumulation — and by whether the Dow’s underperformance is a one-session blip or the beginning of rotation back out of defensives as trade relief optimism starts to fade at the margin. Watch the levels. Let price settle the argument.
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.

