Overview:
The VIX hit 22.22, up 11.8%, as President Trump said Iran would 'have to pay the price' following a second night of U.S. military strikes. WTI crude climbed toward $92, gold held above $4,063, and the 10-year yield settled at 4.52%. The ECB rate decision and May PPI data are the two scheduled macro catalysts that will compete with geopolitics for trader attention Thursday. Adobe and Lennar report earnings after the close.
NEW YORK — For the second consecutive night, U.S. military forces struck targets inside Iran — and this time, President Trump left no ambiguity about his intentions, declaring that Tehran had taken too long to negotiate and would “have to pay the price.”
That statement, delivered late Wednesday, is the sentence every trader needs to read before they pull up their screens Thursday morning. Equity futures are navigating a world in which a hot military conflict in the Middle East is no longer a tail risk — it is the base case. The VIX, now at 22.22 after surging 11.8% Wednesday, is finally beginning to price that reality. WTI crude is pressing toward $92. Gold, despite a 0.2% overnight dip to $4,063.87, remains well above psychological support. The 10-year Treasury yield eased to 4.52% after touching 4.55% intraday Wednesday — a small flight-to-safety bid, but not yet a panicked one. European indices opened firmer, with the FTSE 100 adding 1.2%, the DAX gaining 1.0%, and the CAC 40 up 1.0%, a counterintuitive signal that deserves scrutiny rather than comfort.
War Premium Meets a Data-Heavy Thursday
The strike on Iran is the dominant narrative, but traders cannot afford to watch only one screen. Thursday brings two scheduled macro catalysts that would command full attention in any normal week. The European Central Bank is expected to raise its benchmark rate by 25 basis points, moving from 2.0% to 2.25%. That decision lands mid-morning and adds a second variable to an already complex tape. A hawkish surprise — or an unexpectedly dovish hold — will ripple through EUR/USD and transatlantic bond spreads almost immediately.
Simultaneously, the Bureau of Labor Statistics releases May Producer Price Index data, which will tell traders whether pipeline inflation is still running hot enough to keep the Federal Reserve sidelined. After Wednesday’s CPI print — which our earlier analysis showed was struggling to confirm whether 4.2% is a ceiling or a new floor — the PPI reading carries unusual weight. A hotter-than-expected print would all but eliminate any realistic chance of a Fed pivot before Q4, compounding the pressure from crude oil prices that are themselves a direct inflation input.
The intersection of geopolitical shock and sticky inflation data is not a new combination for this market. As we noted earlier this week, oil at $90 alongside 4.2% inflation has already tested the market’s resilience — and now crude is pressing higher still, with Iran as the accelerant.
Energy in the Driver’s Seat — But for How Long?
WTI crude’s march toward $92 per barrel is the most direct market transmission of the Iran conflict. Oil futures climbed sharply Thursday on supply disruption fears tied to potential Iranian retaliation against regional shipping lanes, including the Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20% of the world’s seaborne oil passes. Any credible threat to that chokepoint does not simply move crude; it reprices the entire energy complex, lifts refining margins, and introduces an input-cost shock that earnings models have not yet absorbed.
Energy sector equities will likely outperform in the early session, but the sector-rotation story has a short shelf life if escalation tips into a genuine supply disruption. At that point, the winning trade shifts from energy stocks to bonds, gold, and volatility products — a sequence this market has rehearsed before but not executed at scale this cycle.
The counterargument deserves space here. Iran’s actual export capacity has been constrained by sanctions for years, meaning a kinetic escalation may add more fear premium than real supply disruption. If that fear premium fails to translate into actual barrels removed from the market within the next 48 hours, crude could reverse sharply — and with it, the geopolitical risk premium that has been supporting energy equities and suppressing rate-sensitive growth stocks.
Adobe and Lennar — Earnings in the Crossfire
In a session dominated by geopolitics and macro data, it is easy to overlook that two economically significant companies report earnings after Thursday’s close. Adobe will test whether AI monetization is delivering real revenue acceleration, or whether the company’s integration of generative tools is being obscured by macro softness in creative software spending. The stock has been under pressure from concerns about AI-native competitors eating into its addressable market — the same theme our earlier analysis of AI dilution risks in the tech sector addressed directly.
Lennar, the homebuilder, will provide the sharpest real-time read on how mortgage rates near current levels — anchored by a 10-year yield that has been glued above 4.50% for weeks — are affecting housing demand. Any guidance cut from Lennar will land like a forward-earnings warning for the entire rate-sensitive consumer economy, not just the housing sector. Given that the triple threat of inflation, Iran, and AI dilution is already compressing multiple expansion, a weak Lennar print would add a demand-destruction narrative to an already crowded bear case.
Levels That Will Decide Thursday’s Direction
The watch table below identifies the specific levels and events that will set the tone from the open through the close. This is not a day for passive monitoring — each of these triggers has a clear directional implication.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude resistance | $92–$93 | Break above $93 confirms physical supply fear; below $91 at close suggests fear premium deflating |
| 10-Year Treasury yield | 4.52% | Hold below 4.50% = flight-to-safety intact; reversal above 4.55% = rate pressure returns alongside geopolitical stress |
| VIX danger zone | 25.00 | A VIX close above 25 signals systematic de-risking is underway; historically precedes 2–3% S&P drawdowns within the following session |
| ECB rate decision | +25 bps exp. | Hawkish surprise (50 bps) strengthens EUR, pressures rate-sensitive U.S. growth stocks; dovish hold weakens euro and adds a disinflationary signal |
| May PPI release | 8:30 AM ET | Hot print above consensus re-prices Fed pause expectations lower; soft print would be the session’s most bullish data point |
When Europe’s Rally and America’s War Don’t Add Up
The single most dissonant data point in Thursday’s premarket is the behavior of European equities. The FTSE 100 gained 1.2%, the DAX added 1.0%, and the CAC 40 rose 1.0% in early trading — all of this while U.S. warplanes were striking Iran for a second night. That divergence is not random noise. European defense stocks are almost certainly leading the advance, as they have in every previous Middle East escalation cycle. Investors rotating into BAE Systems, Rheinmetall, and Airbus Defense while selling export-sensitive industrials explains a lot of the apparent incongruity in the headline index moves.
The Nikkei and Hang Seng data for Thursday’s Asian session were not available at publication time, but the directional signal from Europe — cautious optimism concentrated in defense and energy, not broad-based risk appetite — is the correct interpretive frame for what U.S. traders will inherit at the 9:30 open.
As we covered in yesterday’s session analysis, the market’s capacity to absorb war premium alongside persistent inflation has already been tested at the Nasdaq’s first-hour footing. The question Thursday is whether a second night of strikes — paired with a VIX above 22, crude near $92, a live ECB decision, and PPI data — represents the straw that breaks the market’s studied indifference, or simply another data point that gets absorbed and forgotten by noon.
My answer: this session is genuinely different from the prior two. The combination of a second strike, the presidential rhetoric ruling out near-term de-escalation, and a data calendar that could independently move rates in either direction means that by Thursday’s close, traders will have their clearest signal yet about whether equities can sustain any level above the 200-day moving average while a hot war runs in the background. Watch the VIX above 25, crude above $93, and the 10-year above 4.55% as the three levels that, if all triggered simultaneously, would represent a regime shift rather than a risk-off day. Any two of the three crossing would be enough to warrant reducing exposure heading into the weekend. The opening hour will set the tone — and on a day this crowded with catalysts, the first hour may well write the whole story.
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.

