Overview:
At 1:30 PM ET on June 18, 2026, the S&P 500 is trading up 1.15% and the Nasdaq is up 1.5%, reversing Wednesday's broad selloff that saw the S&P shed 1.21%. Intel is the headline mover, surging 8.5% after a Trump-brokered Apple chip manufacturing deal, while crude oil slides on the Hormuz agreement. The divergence between large-cap tech strength and Russell 2000 weakness — down 0.72% — is the sharpest fault line in today's tape.
NEW YORK — U.S. stocks are staging a broad midday recovery Thursday, with the S&P 500 up 1.15% and the Nasdaq Composite surging 1.5%, as two headline-level catalysts — a geopolitical breakthrough in the Strait of Hormuz and a landmark domestic chip deal involving Intel and Apple — are doing the heavy lifting after Wednesday’s sharp selloff.
Two Catalysts, One Direction — What Is Actually Driving the Tape
The dominant narrative Thursday is geopolitical. President Donald Trump and Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian signed a memorandum of understanding that calls for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz without tolls for at least 60 days, a direct follow-on from this week’s ceasefire diplomacy. The Strait handles roughly 20% of global oil transit, and the market responded immediately: crude oil prices slid sharply, relieving one of the more persistent inflation inputs traders have been watching through the spring.
That oil slide is doing double-duty. It eases near-term inflation pressure — critical context given that the Federal Reserve held rates steady at its latest meeting but signaled continued vigilance on price stability. Lower energy costs give Chairman Kevin Warsh a modest macro cushion heading into the next policy window. As we covered earlier this week, Warsh’s first Fed call now has a ceasefire rally to either validate or temper — and today’s price action is, at minimum, giving him room to stay patient.
The second driver is domestic industrial policy dressed up as a tech story. Trump announced that Intel has agreed to design and build chips for Apple in the United States, sending Intel shares up 8.5% in premarket and sustaining the gain into the afternoon session. The deal taps into the broader CHIPS Act investment thesis and revives a semiconductor narrative that had been under pressure heading into Thursday. For more on the Intel setup, we broke down whether Intel’s 9% gap-up signals a real semiconductor comeback earlier today.
Intel and the Chip Sector — One Trade or a Trend?
Intel’s 8.5% surge is the biggest single-stock story on Thursday’s tape. The Apple chip manufacturing deal — brokered, notably, through presidential announcement rather than a standard earnings or contract filing — puts Intel back at the center of the domestic semiconductor conversation after a prolonged stretch of market-share erosion and margin pressure. The stock’s move at the open wiped out roughly two weeks of underperformance in a single session.
The harder question is whether this is Intel-specific or a read-through for the broader chip sector. Nvidia and AMD are both trading higher, benefiting from the general AI-infrastructure sentiment lift. But analysts are cautious about reading too much into one politically announced deal. The CHIPS Act framework has produced headline wins before without immediately translating into revenue-line improvements for the companies involved.
It is also worth placing this in context of the AI trade’s recent fragility. Wednesday’s 1.34% Nasdaq drop raised real questions about whether the AI trade was fracturing — and one deal announcement, however symbolically significant, does not by itself repair that technical damage. The Nasdaq has to reclaim and hold above 26,200 on a closing basis before the sector rotation argument resets constructively.
The Sector Split — Who Is Leading and Who Is Getting Left Behind
Technology is the clear sector leader Thursday, driven by Intel and the ripple effect through semiconductor-adjacent names. Energy is the notable laggard despite the broader market’s gains — and the logic is straightforward. Lower oil prices compress energy-sector earnings expectations in real time, so the geopolitical catalyst that is lifting equities broadly is simultaneously headwind for the XLE cohort. The energy sector is trading negative at midday even as the S&P gains 1.15%.
Defensives — utilities and consumer staples — are underperforming the tape but holding small gains, consistent with a risk-on session where investors are rotating away from safe harbors rather than abandoning them entirely. Financials are modestly higher, helped by the Fed’s hold decision removing the immediate tail risk of another rate surprise. Healthcare is flat to marginally positive, uninspired by today’s macro catalysts.
The Russell 2000’s -0.72% decline at midday is the most telling cross-asset signal of the session. Small-caps tend to benefit most from genuine macro improvements — lower rates, stronger domestic demand, easier credit conditions. The fact that they are red while large-cap tech rips tells you this rally is being driven by two specific narratives, not by a broad shift in the economic outlook. That is not necessarily bearish, but it does argue against treating today as the start of a sustained broad-market advance. Thursday’s jobless claims data did little to change the rate-cut calculus in a way that would lift rate-sensitive small-caps.
What Needs to Happen Before the Close
The afternoon session carries a few specific tests. S&P 7,500 is the first level to watch — the index closed Wednesday at 7,420, and a close back above 7,500 would signal that Tuesday’s intraday highs are back in play and that the selloff was corrective rather than the start of a deeper retracement. Failure to hold 7,500 into the final hour would suggest today’s move is primarily a gap-fill trade rather than genuine accumulation.
On Intel, the $35 level cited by analysts as an overshoot threshold becomes the afternoon tell. If the stock fades from its premarket highs and closes below that level, expect the initial enthusiasm to be reinterpreted as a sell-the-news event by Friday morning. Options flow in Intel is unusually elevated Thursday, meaning delta hedging activity could amplify moves in either direction in the final 90 minutes.
The Hormuz MOU carries a 60-day window — markets are pricing it as durable today, but the agreement’s enforceability and the absence of a binding permanent treaty mean energy traders will test this assumption repeatedly. Any headline suggesting friction on the terms could send crude reversing, which would remove one of the two main supports under today’s rally simultaneously. For deeper context on how the Fed’s posture interacts with the geopolitical backdrop, see our analysis on whether the Fed’s rate-hike signal is undercutting the peace-trade rally.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 key close level | 7,500 | Close above = recovery confirmed; close below = gap-fill, not accumulation |
| Nasdaq resistance | 26,200 | Must close above to reset AI-trade bullish structure after Wednesday’s selloff |
| Intel analyst caution level | $35.00 | Bulge-bracket desks flagging this as overshoot threshold; fade risk on close above |
| Russell 2000 confirmation | 2,917 | Small-caps must reclaim flat or better to validate broad-market rally thesis |
| Hormuz MOU duration risk | 60 days | Any headline on enforcement friction reverses crude rally and pulls this tape’s key support |
This afternoon sets up as a tape that can deliver a constructive close — but it requires both catalysts to hold and breadth to improve in the final hour. A rally this concentrated in two stories, with small-caps lagging and energy in the red, is one bad headline from losing its footing. Trade the confirmation, not the anticipation.
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.

