Overview:
The S&P 500 was up 1.49% and the Nasdaq 2.38% at midday Monday, powered by a U.S.-Iran peace deal that sent energy stocks lower and redirected capital into AI, semiconductors, and travel names. SpaceX's greenshoe exercise pushed total IPO proceeds to $85.7 billion, with shares trading at $173.95. Wolfspeed surged 15.52% and 3M led Dow components with a 3.70% gain to $148.62, while Diamondback Energy shed 3.5% as crude slid toward $80 per barrel.
NEW YORK — A U.S.-Iran peace deal struck over the weekend cracked the geopolitical pressure that has weighed on markets for months, and by midday Monday, traders had already decided what it means: sell energy, buy everything else.
The S&P 500 was up 1.49% at midday. The Nasdaq led with a 2.38% advance. The Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 1.20%, and the Russell 2000 trailed the field at +0.79% — a spread that tells you this is a large-cap growth trade, not a broad economic optimism trade. The divergence between the Nasdaq and the small-cap Russell matters: small caps tend to outperform when rate-cut expectations firm up, and the fact that they are lagging today suggests the market has not yet decided that the peace deal changes the Fed’s calculus.
The Case the Bulls Are Making — and the One Flaw in It
The logic is simple enough. President Trump announced Sunday night on social media that a deal with Iran was “now complete.” Pakistan’s Prime Minister confirmed a signing ceremony scheduled for Friday in Switzerland. The Strait of Hormuz — through which roughly 20% of global oil shipments transit — is set to reopen. CNBC’s breaking coverage confirmed oil prices sliding toward $80 per barrel as traders unwound the geopolitical risk premium that had been embedded in crude for weeks.
For equity investors, lower oil is a tax cut in disguise. It reduces input costs across manufacturing, transportation, and chemicals. It eases consumer pressure at the pump. And it gives the Federal Reserve one less argument for keeping rates elevated. The bulls have a credible case.
The flaw is timing. The Fed’s June meeting begins Tuesday, and the rate hold is already priced in. What is not priced in is any shift in forward guidance. A stock market surging on peace optimism, combined with oil prices falling, gives the Fed’s new chair Kevin Warsh a complicated backdrop. As we explored in our analysis of Warsh’s first rate decision, any signal of premature easing could be read as a policy mistake given where inflation remains. The peace deal may well be doing the Fed’s job — but as we argued earlier this morning, that is not the same as clearing the way for cuts.
SpaceX, Fox-Roku, and a Tape That Cannot Stop Generating Headlines
Even without a geopolitical catalyst, today would have been a busy session. SpaceX underwriters exercised their overallotment option, lifting total proceeds from the Thursday IPO to $85.7 billion. The greenshoe alone — the incremental capital raised beyond the initial $75 billion — surpasses the total size of almost every technology IPO on record. Bloomberg’s markets desk noted shares climbed 8.1% to $173.95 in early trading, extending the momentum from the IPO day itself. Whether that valuation holds is a separate question — one we examined in detail in our valuation analysis published this morning.
Then there is Fox Corporation, which announced a $22 billion acquisition of Roku, offering $160 per share — $96 in cash plus 0.9693 shares of FOX Class A common stock for each Roku share. Existing FOX shareholders would own approximately 73% of the combined company upon closing. The deal is either a savvy bet on connected-TV distribution or a legacy media company paying a peak-cycle premium for streaming infrastructure it should have built organically years ago. The official press release frames it as a content-plus-distribution play. The skeptics’ case is harder to dismiss than it looks — a point we made in our earlier deep-dive on whether this deal is already mispriced.
Where the Money Is Going — and Where It Is Running From
The sector rotation today is unambiguous. Energy stocks are the day’s clear losers as oil slides. Diamondback Energy dropped 3.5% and HF Sinclair fell 3.4% — neither company did anything wrong; the macro simply repriced against them. When the Strait of Hormuz threat evaporates, so does the scarcity premium embedded in domestic producer valuations.
The capital that left energy went into growth. Wolfspeed surged 15.52%, AXT gained 14.8%, and Collective Mining climbed 11.5%. Seagate Technology rose 9%. These are not household names, but their moves signal a specific trade: investors rotating into higher-beta, rate-sensitive names that benefit from any perception of easing financial conditions. Nvidia advanced 1.77% to $225.005 — a gain that looks modest relative to the smaller names but represents enormous dollar-volume movement given its market capitalization. 3M led Dow components with a 3.70% gain to $148.62, driven by renewed infrastructure spending projections that a more stable geopolitical backdrop makes more plausible.
The one sector worth watching that is not getting headlines: travel. Yahoo Finance’s sector tracker confirmed travel and leisure names moving higher alongside AI and semiconductors — a logical consequence of lower jet fuel costs and reduced Middle East risk for international routes. If that trade holds into earnings season, it could quietly become one of the second-half’s more durable themes.
What the Afternoon Session Needs to Prove
Three things matter between now and the close. First, whether the S&P 500 can hold its 1.49% gain or whether late-session profit-taking — common ahead of Fed meetings — bleeds it back toward flat. Second, whether oil stabilizes near $80 or continues lower; a further decline would extend the energy selloff and test whether the sector’s weighting drags on the broader index. Third, whether SpaceX’s 8.1% post-greenshoe gain holds, because any fade there would signal that the IPO enthusiasm is exhausting itself rather than building.
The Fed meeting itself begins Tuesday and concludes Wednesday. No rate move is expected. What traders are actually pricing is forward guidance — specifically, whether Warsh signals any openness to cuts in the back half of 2026 given that oil prices have now dropped materially. Reuters’ Fed coverage noted the widely held expectation of an unchanged rate decision, but the statement language will be parsed for any shift in the “inflation remains elevated” framing. If Warsh’s first statement softens that language even marginally, this rally has another leg. If it doubles down on caution, the peace-deal pop could give back half its gains by Thursday. For more on the stakes of this specific decision, see our earlier analysis of whether the June decision breaks the market’s resolve.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| WTI Crude Oil | ~$80/bbl | A break below $78 would accelerate energy sector selling and test whether lower oil is net positive or signals demand concern |
| SpaceX (SPCX) | $173.95 | Must hold IPO-week gains to confirm institutional demand, not just retail momentum; a close below $165 would be a warning |
| Roku deal price (FOX offer) | $160.00/sh | If Roku trades materially below $155, market is pricing deal risk or a competing bid; above $158 signals deal confidence |
| Fed meeting begins | Tuesday June 16 | Statement Wednesday; any softening of “inflation elevated” language could extend today’s rally; hawkish hold risks a reversal |
| Iran deal signing ceremony | Friday, Switzerland | If ceremony is delayed or conditions attached, expect a partial unwind of today’s energy-to-growth rotation |
The afternoon setup is straightforward on the surface and treacherous underneath. This market has good reason to rally — a genuine geopolitical catalyst, a record-breaking IPO with continuing momentum, and a blockbuster M&A deal confirming that corporate confidence is intact. What keeps this from being a clean bull case is the Fed, which has not changed, and an inflation backdrop that has not cooperated. Monday’s tape is asking a question the market will not answer until Wednesday: does the peace deal give Warsh cover to turn, or does a surging Nasdaq make him dig in harder? The honest answer is that nobody knows yet — and that uncertainty is exactly why the close matters more than the open today.
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.

