NEW YORK — Eight straight weeks of gains have carried the S&P 500 to 7,473, and the market is now walking into the one kind of week that has a history of ending streaks: short, data-dense, and geopolitically unresolved.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this week is that the consensus is positioned for continuation — and that is precisely what makes Thursday dangerous. PCE is the number that matters most to Kevin Warsh’s Fed right now, and any upside surprise lands on a tape that has priced in a relatively benign inflation path. Watch the 7,400 level on the S&P 500: that is where the August consolidation found support, and a break below it on a hot PCE print would shift the narrative from “soft landing confirmed” to “rate cuts are off the table.” The contrarian question nobody is asking: if Brent at $100 is already in the price, why is the energy sector quietly lagging equities? Either oil stays here and earnings estimates are wrong, or oil moves and the inflation story reopens. Neither is good for eight weeks of momentum.

U.S. markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day, compressing what would normally be a five-day week into four sessions loaded with macro data, a major tech earnings release, and a geopolitical overhang that has not resolved itself no matter how many times officials use the word “progress.” The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 50,579.70 Friday — a record — while the Nasdaq added 0.2% to finish at 26,343.97. The VIX ended the week at 16.70, low enough to breed complacency, not low enough to signal conviction.

Data Visual
S&P 500 Weekly Performance Streak: Eight Consecutive Gains
This chart shows the S&P 500’s weekly percentage changes over the past eight weeks, illustrating the sustained rally traders must now defend heading into a data-heavy shortened week.
S&P 500 Weekly Performance Streak: Eight Consecutive Gains
Values in %

What Got Us Here — and Why It Is Not a Clean Story

The proximate catalyst for Friday’s move was incremental progress in U.S.-Iran nuclear negotiations, with Secretary of State Marco Rubio describing “slight progress” in mediated talks. Tehran is reviewing the latest U.S. proposal delivered through Pakistan. That is thin. Markets chose to read diplomatic ambiguity as optimism, which is a pattern worth watching because it means any deterioration — even a delay — carries asymmetric downside. Brent crude at $100.21 reflects exactly this fragility: not a crisis premium, but not a resolution discount either.

The other force driving sentiment this month was Nvidia’s fiscal Q1 2027 report on May 20, which delivered $81.6 billion in quarterly revenue, up 85% year-over-year and 20% sequentially. That number reset the AI infrastructure investment thesis for the entire sector and pulled technology-adjacent names higher in its wake. The question now is whether Nvidia’s results represent a high-water mark or a floor — and Salesforce’s earnings this Wednesday will offer a first read on whether enterprise AI spending is translating into actual software revenue or simply enriching chip suppliers.

Data Visual
Nvidia Q1 FY2027 Revenue vs. Prior Quarters (USD Billions)
Nvidia’s sequential and year-over-year revenue trajectory shows the AI-driven growth engine traders are pricing into the broader tech sector this earnings cycle.
Nvidia Q1 FY2027 Revenue vs. Prior Quarters (USD Billions)
Values in $B
Key Stat
$81.6 Billion
Nvidia’s Q1 FY2027 revenue — an 85% year-over-year increase that redefined AI earnings expectations and set the bar for every software name reporting this month, including Salesforce on Wednesday.

Earnings to Watch This Week

The calendar is not heavy by volume, but Salesforce is the week’s defining corporate event. Salesforce reports after the close on Wednesday, May 27, with Wall Street looking for approximately $11.06 billion in revenue. The EPS consensus is still tightening ahead of the print.

Beyond the headline number, the metric that determines how the stock trades Thursday morning is Agentforce adoption. The company has been aggressive in positioning its AI agent platform as a recurring revenue driver — but recurring revenue from AI has not yet appeared as a material line item in quarterly disclosures. Stifel analyst J. Parker Lane has framed the sentiment precisely: the stock’s re-rating depends on “when Agentforce and Data Cloud break out and become more material drivers of the overall business.” That moment has not arrived yet. If it doesn’t show up in Wednesday’s numbers, the AI premium embedded in CRM’s multiple faces a real test.

Analyst Note
“Sentiment toward Salesforce is hinging on reacceleration in the second half of this fiscal year and when Agentforce/Data Cloud breaks out and becomes more material drivers of the overall business,” said Stifel analyst J. Parker Lane ahead of Wednesday’s print. With revenue expectations anchored at $11.06 billion, the real test is whether management’s forward guidance signals that the AI monetization curve is bending upward — or whether it remains a story perpetually deferred to the next quarter.

The Economic Calendar — Four Days, Three Macro Events That Matter

Tuesday, May 26 — Consumer Confidence (10:00 AM ET): The Conference Board’s index arrives after the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment reading already signaled deterioration. Traders should watch the “expectations” sub-index rather than the headline — that component has proven more predictive of near-term spending behavior, particularly in environments where energy prices are elevated.

Wednesday, May 27 — Reserve Bank of New Zealand rate decision: The RBNZ held its official cash rate at 2.25% in April. Wednesday’s decision will be closely read for language around oil-driven inflation versus growth risk — the same tension the Federal Reserve is navigating. A dovish pivot from Wellington would reinforce the narrative that global central banks are tolerating inflation to protect growth. A hawkish surprise would do the opposite.

Thursday, May 28 — PCE Inflation + Q1 GDP Revision (8:30 AM ET): This is the week’s macro anchor. The Bureau of Economic Analysis’s advance estimate put Q1 2026 real GDP at +2.0% annualized, a significant rebound from Q4 2025’s +0.5%. The second estimate Thursday will either confirm that acceleration or revise it lower — and either outcome matters for the Fed’s reaction function. PCE, meanwhile, is the inflation gauge the Fed formally targets. With the federal funds rate held at 3.50%–3.75% at the April 28–29 meeting, any upside surprise in core PCE closes the door on near-term rate cuts and puts the June 16–17 FOMC meeting — Kevin Warsh’s first as Fed Chair — into hawkish territory before it even begins.

Friday, May 29 — Germany CPI + Canada GDP: Both releases matter for currency traders and commodity-linked equities. German inflation data will feed directly into ECB rate expectations. Canadian GDP affects CAD/USD positioning and has read-across to energy sector revenues given Canada’s export profile.

For a fuller view of how last week’s data flowed into Friday’s close, see our Market Update from May 22 and the broader context in our analysis of whether Iran headlines were already pressuring the tape before Nvidia reported.

Other Events — Fed Speakers, Options, and Central Bank Calendars

The June 18 options expiration — shifted from June 19 due to the Juneteenth federal holiday — is still three weeks out, but positioning ahead of that expiry is already building in mega-cap tech names. Dealers are long gamma in the 7,400–7,500 range on the S&P, which has acted as a dampener on volatility near those levels. A clean break of 7,400 would change that dynamic quickly.

No scheduled Fed speakers have been confirmed for the holiday-shortened week, which is typical for the Memorial Day period. The next formal Fed communication comes with the June 16–17 FOMC meeting. Warsh has given limited public guidance since his confirmation in a 54–45 Senate vote on May 13, making Thursday’s PCE data even more consequential as the last major inflation print before that meeting.

The RBNZ’s caution is worth noting in a broader context: the central bank explicitly cited Middle East developments as having “materially altered the outlook,” with higher oil prices contributing to near-term inflation and weaker growth simultaneously. That is a stagflationary framing — and it is the same framing that would make the Fed’s job harder if Brent sustains at or above $100. Our earlier analysis of whether the bond market is reasserting control over equity valuations is worth revisiting in this context.

The Levels That Will Define the Week

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 Support 7,400 Break below signals momentum reversal; dealer gamma flips negative, vol accelerates
S&P 500 Resistance 7,550 Closing above confirms momentum extension; weak PCE print needed to sustain push
Brent Crude Watch $100.21 Sustained above $102 reopens inflation narrative; break below $97 signals ceasefire progress being priced in
Salesforce (CRM) Earnings Wed, May 27 AC Revenue consensus $11.06B; Agentforce commentary is the read-across for enterprise AI names
PCE + GDP Revision Thu, May 28 8:30 ET Hot PCE or GDP downgrade = hawkish repricing into Warsh’s June 16–17 debut FOMC

Why the Consensus Might Be Wrong

The dominant read going into this week is that a strong earnings season, easing geopolitical tensions, and a Fed on hold create a benign backdrop for further equity gains. That framing is not wrong — but it is incomplete in ways that matter.

First, the winning streak itself is a risk. Eight consecutive positive weeks compresses the return available to latecomers, encourages momentum-chasing, and builds in fragility. The last time the S&P ran this long was December 2023 — and that streak ended with a sharp January 2024 drawdown as rate-cut expectations got aggressively repriced. The setup is not identical, but the dynamic of elevated positioning into a data-heavy week rhymes.

Second, Bitcoin’s 3.27% gain to $77,114 on Friday is an interesting tell. When risk assets are genuinely well-bid, crypto tends to lag equities as institutional capital rotates toward higher-quality earnings stories. A crypto surge alongside an equity rally occasionally signals speculative froth rather than fundamental demand. It is not a sell signal. It is a question worth asking.

Third, the GDP revision could cut either way. A downward revision to Q1’s +2.0% print would normally be bearish — but in a market praying for rate cuts, weaker growth could paradoxically lift bonds and pull equities with them. The interplay between growth data and rate expectations is not linear right now, and traders who position directionally off Thursday’s number without reading the PCE print simultaneously are taking on unnecessary basis risk.

For context on how similar compressed calendars have played out recently, see our analysis of jobless claims as a fragile-tape indicator.

Setting Up for the Week

The path of least resistance for equities is sideways to modestly higher — a shortened week with Memorial Day Monday dampening volume, an earnings calendar anchored by one name rather than a wave, and macro data that lands Thursday with enough time for traders to react but not enough time to reposition meaningfully before Friday’s close. That is the base case.

The tail risk is a PCE print that forces a hawkish recalibration into Warsh’s June debut, a Salesforce miss that cracks AI software sentiment, or an escalation in Middle East talks that sends Brent through $105. Any one of those events on its own is manageable. All three in a four-day week is a different conversation entirely.

Position sizing matters more than directional conviction this week. The S&P 500 at 7,473 is pricing in a lot of good news. The market has earned its winning streak — but streaks do not protect against data surprises, and this week has several.


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.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...