Overview:
SpaceX opened at $150 per share Friday — an 11% premium to its $135 IPO price — and pushed to $161.33 by midday, making founder Elon Musk the world's first trillionaire with a fortune exceeding $1.05 trillion. The Dow leads the tape at +0.38% while the Russell 2000 hit a new all-time intraday high, up 1.00% on the session. Tech megacaps including Nvidia, Apple, and Microsoft are all lower, weighed by capital rotation into the IPO. A 14-point U.S.-Iran draft agreement that would reopen the Strait
NEW YORK — Friday’s session is a study in competing gravitational forces: the largest IPO in market history is pulling capital sideways just as a near-finalized U.S.-Iran peace deal deflates the geopolitical risk premium that had kept crude above $87 a barrel for most of the week.
At 1:30 PM ET, the S&P 500 stands at 7,403.38, up 0.13% from Thursday’s close of 7,393.30. The Dow Jones Industrial Average leads at 51,040.07, gaining 0.38%, while the Nasdaq Composite lags at 25,716.64, down 0.36% from its prior close of 25,809.66. The Russell 2000 is the session’s quiet standout, up 1.00% and printing a new all-time intraday high — a move that puts its year-to-date gains at nearly 19%.
Two Headlines, One Fractured Market
The tape is being pulled in opposite directions by stories that rarely share a Friday. On one side: President Trump’s announcement overnight that he had canceled planned strikes on Iran and that a 14-point memorandum of understanding was near finalization. The deal, which could be signed as soon as Sunday, reportedly commits the U.S. to lifting oil sanctions in exchange for Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days. West Texas Intermediate crude fell 3.97% to $84.23 a barrel by midday. Brent dropped 3.84% to $86.91.
That geopolitical relief is real. But it doesn’t solve the inflation problem that arrived simultaneously. The Department of Labor reported Thursday that the Producer Price Index rose 1.1% in May — nearly double the Zacks consensus estimate of 0.6% — with the year-over-year headline PPI at 6.5%, the highest monthly gain since November 2022. Core PPI, stripping out food, energy, and trade services, added 0.8% against an expected 0.5%. As we examined in Can Consumer Sentiment Rescue a Market Drowning in 6.5% Wholesale Inflation?, the combination of sticky producer prices and softening demand metrics is exactly the setup that keeps the Federal Reserve pinned.
Friday also brought the preliminary June University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment reading, with consensus calling for a rebound to 46 from 44.8 — still near recent record lows. Initial jobless claims for the week ended June 6 rose by 4,000 to 229,000, above the 226,000 estimate. Neither data point is alarming in isolation. Together with a PPI print that hot, they sketch a picture of an economy decelerating at the consumer level while upstream costs accelerate — a combination that historically gives the Fed cover to hold, not cut.
SpaceX Changes the Conversation — and the Capital Flows
SpaceX opened Friday at $150 per share, an 11% premium to its $135 IPO price, and pushed to $161.33 by midday — nearly 20% above the offer. The company raised roughly $75 billion through the sale of 555.6 million shares, in what is now confirmed as the largest initial public offering in history. At midday valuation, the company is approaching $2 trillion on a fully diluted basis, and founder Elon Musk’s fortune has crossed $1.05 trillion, making him the first individual in recorded history to hold trillionaire status.
The IPO’s market footprint is hard to overstate. Capital that rotated into SPCX this week came from somewhere — and the evidence sits in the Nasdaq’s underperformance. Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, and Broadcom all slipped at midday. This isn’t coincidence. Fund managers rebalancing for a $75 billion new issue sell what’s liquid and highly appreciated. Big tech qualifies on both counts. As explored in Is the SpaceX IPO Big Enough to Hold a Wobbling Market Together?, the question was never whether SpaceX would pop — it was always whether the broader tape could absorb the capital dislocation. So far, the answer is: barely, and unevenly.
Where the Money Is Actually Moving
Beneath the index noise, sector rotation is telling a clearer story. The Dow’s outperformance is built on three names: Sherwin-Williams leads the blue-chip index with a gain of 1.86%, followed by Goldman Sachs at 1.81% and Caterpillar at 1.31%. Those are industrials, financials, and materials — the exact sectors that benefit from an Iran deal unlocking global trade routes and from falling energy input costs. Goldman’s move is notable: easing geopolitical tension reduces tail-risk hedging demand, and that’s good for trading-desk revenues.
On the losing side within the Dow, Salesforce fell 2.35%, the Travelers Companies shed 1.98%, and IBM dropped 1.96%. Outside the index, Playtika Holding (PLTK) climbed 5.43% and Rocket Lab (RKLB) gained 4.5% — the latter riding SpaceX’s halo effect as a space-adjacent infrastructure name. The Cboe Volatility Index fell nearly 12% on the session, which on the surface reads as confidence. But a 12% VIX drop on a day when the Nasdaq is negative and PPI is at a three-year high deserves scrutiny, not celebration. The Iran near-miss compression of the risk premium may be doing more work than the underlying equity fundamentals warrant.
The S&P’s technical setup adds another layer. Thursday’s session saw the index bounce off its 50-day moving average near 7,230 — a level that is now the first meaningful floor. Below that, the first Fibonacci retracement of the March-through-June rally sits at 7,118. The index opened Friday at 7,287.67 before pushing higher; the gap between the open and current levels is thin enough that a late-session reversal could test Thursday’s recovery narrative quickly. For context on what the PPI means for rate expectations, that Fibonacci level matters: a Fed that refuses to cut into 6.5% wholesale inflation leaves equities without a policy backstop on the next dip.
Into the Close — The Levels That Will Tell the Story
Three things matter between now and 4 PM. First, whether SpaceX holds its gains or fades — a close below $150 (the open) would signal the IPO pop was a momentum trade, not a value reset, and could trigger selling in the space-adjacent names. Second, whether the Nasdaq recovers any of its 0.36% gap to flat — a close below 25,600 would confirm that mega-cap tech’s problems today are structural rotation, not a single-session blip. Third, whether the Iran deal language gets more specific over the weekend; any diplomatic backtracking before Sunday would reverse the oil move and undo the Dow’s gains in a session with no market open to absorb it.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 — 50-day MA | ~7,230 | Key support; a close below this signals Thursday’s bounce was a relief trade, not a trend reversal |
| S&P 500 — Fibonacci level | 7,118 | First retracement of March–June rally; secondary floor if 50-day MA breaks on a future pullback |
| SpaceX (SPCX) — IPO open | $150.00 | A close below this level signals the pop was speculative momentum; watch for Nasdaq selling to accelerate |
| WTI Crude | $84.23 | Iran deal progress is priced in here; any diplomatic breakdown over the weekend resets this sharply higher |
| Nasdaq Composite — session low watch | 25,600 | A close below this would confirm structural rotation out of mega-cap tech, not a single-day drift |
The afternoon setup is asymmetric in a way that favors the cautious. The Iran deal, if real, is largely priced into oil and defense names already. SpaceX’s gains are impressive but concentrated. The PPI number doesn’t vanish because the tape is green. A quiet Friday close near current levels would be the most bullish outcome — not because it represents strength, but because it keeps the technical structure intact heading into a weekend where geopolitical risk could swing dramatically in either direction. For a longer read on how this week’s overlapping catalysts have shaped the tape, see Is the Triple Threat of Inflation, Iran, and AI Dilution Too Much for This Market?
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.

