Overview:
S&P 500 closed at 7,386.65, down 0.26%, after clawing back from a 3.5% intraday decline that briefly threatened the May 19 swing low at 7,334. U.S. strikes on Iran were confirmed after the bell, introducing fresh overnight geopolitical risk for Wednesday's session. The Nasdaq-100 fell 1.12% as semiconductor and large-cap tech names led losses, while Cracker Barrel surged in after-hours trade after posting EPS of $0.29 against a consensus estimate of negative $0.42.
NEW YORK — Tuesday’s session handed traders a full reel of drama compressed into a single afternoon: a 3.5% intraday collapse in the S&P 500, a partial recovery that left the index down just 0.26% at the close, and then — after the bell — confirmation that U.S. Central Command had launched strikes against Iran.
The S&P 500 settled at 7,386.65, down 0.26%. The Nasdaq Composite fell 0.97% to 25,678.82, with the Nasdaq-100 off 1.12%. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 86.10 points, or 0.17%, to close at 50,872.11. The Russell 2000 edged up roughly a quarter of a percent, marking a quiet but notable divergence from the tech-heavy indices.
The Tape from Open to Close
Tuesday opened under pressure and accelerated lower through the morning as geopolitical risk headlines began circulating. U.S. Central Command confirmed strikes against Iran in response to the previous day’s downing of a U.S. Army Apache helicopter — but the actual military action hit after the 4 p.m. close. What the market was pricing through the session was the escalation risk, not the event itself. That distinction matters: the event is now confirmed, which means Wednesday opens with a known catalyst rather than a feared one. Whether certainty is better or worse than ambiguity depends entirely on what Iran does next.
The intraday low came close to testing the May 19 swing low at 7,334 — a level that has now been defended twice. That is meaningful support, but it is not impenetrable. The afternoon recovery was substantial in percentage terms, but it left the S&P 500 still below 7,500, the broken short-term support level that now acts as resistance. The geopolitical dimension to this selloff was already building before Tuesday’s strikes were confirmed, and traders who dismissed the risk narrative last week are now repricing it in real time.
Apple Lands the Wrong Kind of Headlines at WWDC
Apple closed at $290.55, down 3.64%, after its WWDC 2026 keynote drew a muted reaction from investors who had hoped for a more compelling AI product roadmap. The Siri overhaul and Apple Intelligence announcements were seen as incremental rather than transformative — and the analyst community wasted no time quantifying the problem.
The broader technology sector fell nearly 2% on the day, making it one of only two sectors to close in the red. The iShares Semiconductor ETF shed 1% — a pointed reversal of Monday’s 6% rebound. Micron dropped 1%. Broadcom fell 1%. Monday’s semiconductor surge is looking increasingly like a one-day event rather than the start of a sustained recovery. The question of whether that rebound had enough fundamental backing to hold was already being asked, and Tuesday’s follow-through gave a provisional answer: no.
Marta Norton, chief investment strategist for Empower Investments, put the broader concern plainly: the memory semiconductor area that has been lifting the market has run so hard it feels very toppy. That framing is important. If the semis are the engine of this rally and the engine is stalling, the rest of the train does not move on its own.
Where the Money Actually Went
The session was not entirely a loss — it just depended which zip code of the market you were watching. Food and beverage companies led sector gains, rising 2.11%. Healthcare followed, with the iShares U.S. Healthcare ETF rising 0.7%. Homebuilders were the standout, with the iShares U.S. Home Construction ETF rallying more than 2% after the National Association of Realtors reported better-than-expected existing home sales for May. That data point — housing holding up despite elevated rates — deserves more credit than it got today given how crowded the negative housing narrative has been.
Energy stocks fell 2.26% and mining stocks dropped 2.41%. The energy decline is particularly interesting in the context of Iran strikes: crude typically rallies on Middle East escalation, but energy equities sold off. That gap between commodity direction and equity direction in the energy sector is worth watching into Wednesday. Either crude was not moving enough to lift stocks, or the market is already pricing a short-lived disruption. Neither interpretation is comforting for energy bulls.
On the M&A front, Payoneer Global closed at $6.39, up 24.32%, after reports that Canadian payments firm Nuvei is in advanced talks to acquire Payoneer for approximately $2.7 billion. That kind of single-stock move is a reminder that deal flow did not stop because geopolitics got louder — it just got overshadowed.
After the Bell: Cracker Barrel Rewrites the Script
The two major after-hours earnings reports both delivered upside surprises, though neither is a macro bellwether in the traditional sense.
Cracker Barrel reported adjusted EPS of $0.29 against a consensus estimate of negative $0.42 — a beat so wide it would normally generate suspicion about the quality of estimates. Revenue came in at $797.4 million, topping the $777.53 million expected. The company raised its fiscal 2026 revenue outlook to between $3.27 billion and $3.30 billion from a prior range of $3.24 billion to $3.27 billion. Shares rose 2.16% in after-hours trade to $34.95. The result speaks to resilient consumer spending in the casual dining segment, which cuts somewhat against the recessionary narrative that has been building in discretionary equities.
J.M. Smucker posted net sales of $2.3 billion, up 6% year over year, with adjusted EPS of $2.77 — a 20% increase. Net income per diluted share came in at $3.64. The consumer staples giant is benefiting from pricing power and volume stability that many discretionary peers cannot replicate. Both results reinforce the rotation trade that was already visible in today’s session — away from growth and toward companies generating predictable cash flows in a volatile macro environment. With CPI data due Wednesday, that defensiveness may prove well-timed.
What Wednesday Needs to Answer
The overnight risk picture changed materially after the close. U.S. strikes on Iran are now confirmed. The market spent the entire session pricing the possibility — now it needs to price the consequence. Iran’s response, or non-response, in the hours before Wednesday’s open will likely determine whether the May 19 low at 7,334 becomes a line in the sand or a speed bump on the way to 7,200.
CPI data lands Wednesday and the market is already fragile. A hot print would layer rate anxiety on top of geopolitical risk. A soft print might give the tape room to breathe, but only if Iran headlines stay contained. The two catalysts are independent and potentially additive on the downside — that asymmetry should inform position sizing going into the open. The Fed’s silence ahead of the June 17 meeting adds another layer of uncertainty that the market cannot hedge with forward guidance.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 key resistance | 7,500–7,517 | Broken support now acts as ceiling; reclaiming this zone would shift near-term bias to neutral |
| S&P 500 swing low support | 7,334 | May 19 low defended twice; a close below this level opens the path to 7,200 |
| S&P 500 major support | 7,000 | Structural floor; a move here would represent a significant trend breakdown requiring reassessment of bull case |
| Apple (AAPL) close | $290.55 | Watch for analyst downgrades Wednesday morning following WWDC; further weakness would pressure Nasdaq-100 |
| Wednesday CPI release | 8:30 AM ET | Hot print adds rate risk on top of Iran escalation; soft print provides relief but Iran headlines remain the primary variable |
Tuesday’s close deserves credit for the recovery and skepticism for the same reason. A market that falls 3.5% intraday and recovers most of it is either exhibiting remarkable resilience or is being propped up by mechanical support buying that will not hold once the overnight risk is fully absorbed. Wednesday’s open — with Iran strikes now confirmed and CPI on the calendar — will begin to answer which version of Tuesday actually happened.
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.

