Overview:

The S&P 500 is barely positive at 7,141 midday on April 29 as a 7% oil surge to above $106 per barrel reframes the Federal Reserve's afternoon rate decision. Strong beats from NXP Semiconductors (+25.26%), Visa (+10%), and Starbucks (+8.48%) are unable to lift the broader tape, with the Dow losing 195 points and small-caps underperforming. The Fed is expected to hold rates steady at 2:00 PM ET, but elevated energy prices are complicating the rate-cut calculus heading into summer. Kevin Warsh's n

NEW YORK — Oil above $106 a barrel is doing what geopolitical headlines almost never manage: it is changing the math on Federal Reserve policy in real time, and the market is only beginning to price it.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this tape is that the earnings story is genuinely strong — stronger than the flat indexes suggest. The problem is that $106 oil rewrites the inflation chapter just as the Fed walks to the podium. I’m watching WTI closely: a close above $108 makes any Powell pivot language nearly impossible to sustain. The real question here is whether energy is a transient Hormuz premium or the start of a structurally higher regime. Watch the two-year Treasury yield into the close — if it moves above 4.90%, traders are repricing cuts out entirely, not just delaying them. The contrarian case: oil at these levels historically compresses consumer discretionary margins fast enough to slow the economy and force rate cuts sooner, not later. That outcome would perversely reward the very stocks being sold today.

At 1:30 PM ET, the S&P 500 holds a razor-thin gain of 0.03% at 7,141.29, the Nasdaq Composite adds 0.13% to 24,695.51, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average slides 0.40% to 48,946.31 and the Russell 2000 gives back 0.17% to 2,751.41. The divergence between large-cap growth and small-cap cyclicals is the clearest signal on the board: rate-sensitive smaller companies are bearing the brunt of a repriced energy environment while mega-cap technology earners absorb the blow more easily.

This session was supposed to be an earnings celebration. It still might be, depending on what Jerome Powell says at 2:30 PM ET. But right now, a roughly 7% intraday surge in WTI crude to above $106 — with Brent trading near $119 — is the dominant variable, not the genuinely impressive beats coming out of semiconductors, payments, and coffee chains.

Data Visual
Midday Earnings Movers: % Change on April 29, 2026
Shows the five most significant individual stock moves midday Wednesday, illustrating the stark earnings divergence traders are navigating.
Midday Earnings Movers: % Change on April 29, 2026
Values in %

The Macro Ceiling: Why $106 Oil Changes the Fed’s Afternoon

The Federal Reserve is universally expected to hold its benchmark rate steady when the 2:00 PM ET decision drops. That much is priced. What is not cleanly priced is the language Powell uses to frame the path forward — and $106 oil handed him a reason to stay hawkish in tone even if the dots still show cuts on the horizon.

President Trump escalated the U.S.-Iran confrontation early Wednesday, issuing a public warning to Tehran to “get smart soon” and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, accompanied by an AI-generated image of himself holding a rifle. Markets read that as a deliberate hardening of the U.S. negotiating stance, not a sign of imminent resolution — which explains why energy equities are the only clear sector winner today while transport, airlines, and consumer discretionary bleed quietly.

Separately, the Senate Banking Committee advanced Kevin Warsh‘s nomination as Fed chair in a party-line vote Wednesday morning, teeing up a full Senate confirmation vote. Warsh is widely regarded as more hawkish than current chair Powell, and his pending arrival introduces a longer-term policy wrinkle that sophisticated desks are already factoring into rate expectations beyond 2026. As we examined earlier this week in Is the Fed Already Irrelevant for This Week’s Market Move?, the Fed’s near-term hold was well-telegraphed — the uncertainty was always in the forward guidance, and today that uncertainty just got bigger.

Key Stat
+7% — WTI crude midday surge
A single-session 7% move in oil directly pressures the Fed’s inflation timeline, compresses consumer discretionary margins, and makes any near-term rate-cut signal from Powell significantly harder to deliver without credibility risk.

The Earnings Underneath: Where the Real Action Is

Strip out the macro noise and Wednesday’s earnings slate is, frankly, exceptional in places. NXP Semiconductors (NXPI) is the standout of the session — shares are up more than 25%, the stock’s best single-day performance since its 2010 IPO. Q1 adjusted EPS of $3.05 beat the $2.95 consensus, revenue rose 12% to $3.18 billion, and CEO Rafael Sotomayor guided data center revenue to more than double — from $200 million in 2025 to over $500 million in 2026. That data center acceleration is the number that matters most for the semiconductor sector, and it validates the thesis that AI infrastructure spending is broadening beyond pure-play names. For more context on how the AI trade is holding up under earnings scrutiny, see our earlier piece Is the OpenAI Revenue Miss Enough to Derail the AI Trade?

Visa (V) added 10% after beating analyst estimates on consumer spending resilience, a signal that the high-end U.S. consumer remains functional despite energy price pressure. CEO Ryan McInerney’s characterization of spending as “resilient” will get tested if oil stays elevated through summer, but for now the payments network is doing what it always does in uncertain environments: collecting tolls regardless of direction.

Starbucks (SBUX) surged nearly 9% after CEO Brian Niccol declared the 18-month turnaround had reached an “inflection point.” U.S. traffic grew 4.3%, global same-store sales rose 6.2%, and management raised the 2026 EPS forecast ceiling to $2.45. That traffic growth number is the one to respect — foot traffic is the hardest metric to manufacture through accounting adjustments, and a 4.3% U.S. gain after quarters of decline signals the simplified menu and labor investments are working. For additional context on how this earnings wave is shaping up against broader momentum, see Can earnings momentum hold as 3 stocks surge 18%+ at the open?

On the losing side, Robinhood Markets (HOOD) is down more than 10% after Q1 EPS of $0.38 and revenue of $1.067 billion missed forecasts of $0.41 and $1.17 billion respectively. The core problem: crypto trading fees collapsed 47% year-over-year. Robinhood built its recent valuation expansion on the assumption that crypto engagement would remain structurally elevated. One quarter doesn’t settle that debate, but two consecutive misses would.

Analyst Note
Analyst reactions to Robinhood’s miss diverged sharply. Barclays cut its price target to $82 from $89 while maintaining an Overweight rating; Keefe Bruyette lowered its target to $65 from $75 at Market Perform. Most strikingly, Bernstein held its $130 target — implying 58% upside from Tuesday’s close — arguing that the crypto fee decline is cyclical, not structural, and that Robinhood’s brokerage and credit products provide sufficient revenue diversification to weather a soft crypto quarter.

Booking Holdings (BKNG) fell 5% despite a technically solid Q1 — 338 million room nights, $53.8 billion in gross bookings, revenue of $5.5 billion rising 16% year-over-year. The problem is the guide: Q2 revenue growth guided to just 4%-6% versus the 11% Wall Street consensus, with management citing Middle East conflict impact running through the end of June. Travel platforms are essentially issuing a real-time read on geopolitical consumer confidence, and Booking’s forward look is not encouraging for the sector.

Data Visual
Major Index Performance vs. Previous Close — April 29, 2026 Midday
Compares midday percentage moves across the four major U.S. equity indexes, revealing where institutional risk appetite is concentrated Wednesday afternoon.
Major Index Performance vs. Previous Close — April 29, 2026 Midday
Values in %

Sector Rotation: Energy Wins, Small Caps Absorb the Damage

The sector rotation Wednesday is legible and fairly mechanical. Energy is the clear outperformer — a 7% crude surge lifts integrated producers, refiners, and pipeline operators across the board. Technology is outperforming the broader market on the strength of semiconductor earnings, particularly NXPI’s extraordinary move. Financials are mixed: Visa’s 10% gain is a large positive drag, but broader bank names are weighing rate-cut repricing against energy inflation exposure on loan books.

Consumer discretionary is under the most structural pressure from elevated oil. Every dollar gasoline takes from consumer wallets is a dollar not spent at discretionary retailers. The Russell 2000’s -0.17% underperformance versus the Nasdaq’s +0.13% gain reflects this directly — small-cap companies have less pricing power, less ability to hedge fuel costs, and more exposure to regional consumer demand. The Dow’s -0.40% decline tracks the damage in industrials and old-economy names with energy cost exposure on both the input and distribution side.

Utilities, historically an oil-surge beneficiary via inflation hedge flows, are seeing modest inflows. Real estate is quiet. Healthcare is neutral. The clearest risk-off signal is in the relative performance of growth versus value: growth is outperforming, which sounds bullish, but only because the best growth names are riding individual earnings beats rather than broad risk appetite. That distinction matters going into the close.

What the Next 90 Minutes Will Actually Decide

The next ninety minutes are, unusually, genuinely binary. At 2:00 PM ET the Fed announces. At 2:30 PM ET Powell speaks — in what is expected to be his final press conference as chair. The market is not positioned for a surprise on the rate decision itself. The positioning risk is entirely in the language: any hint that elevated energy prices have pushed the first rate cut beyond September will hit rate-sensitive small caps and long-duration growth names hard. Any softening of language that leaves the July window open will give the Nasdaq another leg higher.

Watch WTI crude into the close as closely as you watch Powell. If oil holds above $106 on a closing basis, it will be the second consecutive session where energy has functioned as the market’s ceiling. For additional background on how the broader tape has been constructing its recent highs, the Is the S&P 500’s Record Run Built on Solid Ground? analysis remains directly relevant.

After the close tonight, additional earnings reports will add to the picture. Traders caught long into the 2:00 PM decision should have levels defined — not targets.

Level / Event Value Signal
Fed Rate Decision 2:00 PM ET Hold expected; watch forward guidance language for any shift in cut timeline
WTI Crude Close $106+ midday Close above $108 likely forces Powell hawkish tone; close below $104 reduces inflation pressure narrative
S&P 500 Key Level 7,141 Holding flat into Fed; break below 7,100 on hawkish guidance would signal distribution
HOOD Support Post-drop level Bernstein’s $130 target vs Keefe Bruyette’s $65 creates wide analyst range; watch for volume stabilization before any re-entry
Powell Press Conference 2:30 PM ET Final presser as chair; any commentary on energy-driven inflation path or Warsh transition will move rates market immediately

The afternoon setup is asymmetric and the skew favors caution on new longs. The earnings tape is genuinely constructive — NXP, Visa, and Starbucks proved that. But a Fed that cannot credibly signal cuts into a $106 oil environment is a Fed that removes one of the market’s most reliable tailwinds. The S&P 500 at 7,141 is not pricing in a hawkish surprise. If Powell delivers one, the bulls will need more than a good earnings quarter to hold this level into the close.


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...