Overview:
The S&P 500 advanced 73.89 points, or 1.05%, to close at 7,137.90 on Wednesday, April 22, 2026, setting a fresh all-time closing record alongside the Nasdaq Composite, which gained 1.64% to 24,657.57. GE Vernova was among the session's standout performers, surging 13.75% after raising its full-year revenue guidance to $44.5–$45.5 billion on orders growth of 71% to $18.3 billion. The Iran ceasefire's indefinite extension by President Trump removed a near-term geopolitical overhang, though Brent c
NEW YORK, April 22, 2026 — U.S. equities settled at fresh all-time closing records on Wednesday, with the S&P 500 rising 73.89 points, or 1.05%, to 7,137.90, the Nasdaq Composite advancing 1.64% to 24,657.57, the Dow Jones Industrial Average adding 0.69% to 49,490.03, and the Russell 2000 gaining 0.74% to 2,785.38. The Nasdaq-100 led large-cap benchmarks, surging 1.73% to 26,937.28. Breadth was broadly positive, with advancing issues outpacing decliners across the major exchanges as a potent combination of geopolitical relief and a robust earnings season propelled the tape to its strongest close in weeks.
Session Narrative: Ceasefire Extension and Earnings Deliver a Double Catalyst
The rally’s foundation was laid before the open. Following Tuesday’s close, President Trump announced the indefinite extension of the Iran ceasefire, removing a near-term geopolitical flashpoint that had weighed on risk sentiment throughout the prior session. Futures had already begun pricing in relief — as detailed in PreMarket Daily’s early morning brief showing S&P 500 futures +0.55% to 7,103 — and the cash open confirmed the move, with equities gapping higher at the bell.
The ceasefire extension did not, however, eliminate all energy-market anxiety. Brent crude topped $100 a barrel after three vessels were attacked in the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint through which approximately 20% of global oil supply transits. The spike bolstered energy equities and reminded participants that de-escalation in diplomatic channels has not translated into calm on the water. Nonetheless, equity markets treated the ceasefire extension as the dominant signal, and the tape climbed steadily through the morning session without any material pullback.
Earnings provided the second pillar. Approximately 85% of S&P 500 companies have now beaten consensus estimates this quarter per FactSet, an unusually high beat rate that reinforced confidence in corporate fundamentals even amid ongoing macro uncertainty. GE Vernova’s explosive results, Boeing’s sharply narrower-than-expected loss, and strong showings from Micron Technology and Intuitive Surgical collectively sustained the bullish narrative from the open through the close. As documented in PreMarket Daily’s midday pulse, the S&P 500 was already +0.76% to 7,117 at noon, with the afternoon session adding incremental gains as no negative macro surprises emerged.
The CBOE Volatility Index fell 2.97% to 18.92, its lowest reading in several sessions, reflecting the meaningful compression in near-term fear premium that accompanied the geopolitical relief rally.
Sector Scorecard: Technology Leads, Energy Follows, Telecoms Lag
Winners
Technology: +2.25% — The session’s top-performing sector was driven by AI-linked semiconductor names and software platforms. Micron Technology (MU) surged 8.48% to $487.48, powered by AI-fuelled memory demand and the legislative tailwind of the MATCH Act, which seeks to restrict China’s access to chip-manufacturing equipment. Micron’s move extended its year-to-date advance and reinforced the market’s conviction that high-bandwidth memory remains a structural growth theme. Manhattan Associates (MANH) added 5.60% after reporting improved first-quarter results with accelerating cloud revenue growth.
Energy: +1.18% — The sector benefited from the Brent crude spike above $100, with producers and services names advancing in sympathy with the underlying commodity. The energy bid was paradoxically born of the same geopolitical tension that the ceasefire extension was supposed to defuse, illustrating the dual-catalyst dynamic that defined Wednesday’s session.
Communication Services: +0.63% — The sector posted a modest gain. Within telecommunications, the picture was mixed: Verizon Communications (VZ) fell 0.63% to close at $45.98, while T-Mobile US (TMUS) declined 3.31% to $188.92, suggesting idiosyncratic pressures beneath the sector-level headline.
Semiconductors: Divergence Within Strength
Broader semiconductor performance was strong on the AI demand narrative. Western Digital (WDC) rose 1.38% to $389.10, while Sandisk (SNDK) soared 8.37% to $979.07, the latter’s move echoing Micron’s AI-memory thesis. The divergence between memory-adjacent names and traditional telecom highlighted how narrowly the session’s strongest gains were concentrated in artificial intelligence infrastructure plays.
Notable Single-Stock Movers
GE Vernova (GEV): +13.75% — The energy-transition equipment maker was the session’s marquee performer among large-caps. First-quarter revenue of $9.34 billion beat the FactSet estimate of $9.25 billion, but the more impactful figures were orders growth of +71% to $18.3 billion, a backlog of $163 billion, and a raised full-year revenue guidance range of $44.5–$45.5 billion. The scale of the backlog in particular signalled durable multi-year revenue visibility.
Boeing (BA): +5.53% — The aerospace giant reported first-quarter revenue of $22.22 billion against a $21.78 billion consensus, and an adjusted loss per share of -$0.20 against the -$0.83 estimate — a dramatically narrower shortfall than feared. Adjusted free cash flow of -$1.454 billion also beat the -$2.61 billion consensus, reinforcing the narrative of an ongoing operational recovery.
Best Buy (BBY): -4.60% — The consumer electronics retailer was Wednesday’s most notable decliner among large-caps after announcing that Chief Customer, Product, and Fulfillment Officer Jason Bonfig would succeed longtime CEO Corie Barry on October 31, 2026. Leadership transitions at major retailers typically invite near-term uncertainty, and the market’s reaction reflected that dynamic.
After-Hours Earnings and Movers
Tesla (TSLA): Beat Across the Board
After Wednesday’s close, Tesla reported first-quarter 2026 results that exceeded expectations on every key metric. Revenue came in at $22.39 billion versus the Bloomberg consensus of $22.08 billion, adjusted EPS of $0.41 beat the $0.35 estimate, and — most strikingly — gross margin of 21.7% significantly surpassed the 17.7% forecast, signalling meaningful improvement in manufacturing cost efficiency. Tesla’s regular session close was +0.28% ahead of the release, suggesting the market had not pre-positioned heavily for an upside surprise. After-hours price action reflected the beat, with the stock moving higher.
Kyverna Therapeutics (KYTX): +24% After Hours
The clinical-stage immunology company surged 24% in after-hours trading to $12.04 after announcing that its miv-cel CAR T-cell therapy met its primary endpoint in a pivotal trial for a rare autoimmune neurological condition. 81% of 26 patients achieved at least a 20% improvement in walking speed, with a 46% median improvement in the Timed 25-Foot Walk at 16 weeks. The company also reported fourth-quarter 2025 EPS of -$0.80, beating the -$0.84 consensus estimate.
Earlier Reporters: GEV, Boeing, AT&T, United Airlines
GE Vernova and Boeing reported pre-market and have been covered in the sector section above. AT&T (T) posted first-quarter revenue of $31.5 billion, up 2.9% year-over-year from $30.6 billion, with the stock closing up 0.39% to $25.98. United Airlines (UAL) beat first-quarter earnings and revenue estimates but guided second-quarter EPS below the FactSet consensus; the stock gained approximately 1.5% in early trade before settling near unchanged. Intuitive Surgical (ISRG) was characterised by analysts as reporting a “blowout quarter,” contributing to strength in healthcare-adjacent technology names.
What Today Sets Up for Tomorrow
Wednesday’s session leaves several dynamics in tension heading into Thursday, April 23. The S&P 500’s fresh all-time closing high at 7,137.90 now serves as the immediate reference point; a failure to hold above the prior record — and above the 7,100 level that served as a pivot throughout the week, as tracked in Wednesday’s opening bell briefing — would attract attention. Tesla’s after-hours beat is likely to provide a positive lead for Nasdaq futures at Thursday’s open, though the magnitude of the reaction will depend on management commentary on the earnings call.
The Strait of Hormuz situation warrants close monitoring overnight. Three vessel attacks in a single session represent a material escalation in the shipping corridor, and any further incidents could reignite the crude premium and energy-sector volatility that temporarily weighed on broader sentiment earlier this week, as detailed in the April 20 market close. Brent crude above $100 is a threshold that historically begins to weigh on consumer sentiment and transportation-cost assumptions embedded in corporate guidance.
The earnings calendar remains dense. Coca-Cola reports on April 28, but Thursday brings additional S&P 500 reporters whose results will either sustain or challenge the 85% beat rate that has underpinned the rally’s fundamental narrative.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 all-time close | 7,137.90 | Record close; a sustained hold above this level would confirm breakout momentum into Thursday’s session. |
| S&P 500 pivot support | 7,100 | Key intraday reference throughout this week; a break below would signal fading conviction in the ceasefire rally. |
| VIX closing level | 18.92 | A move back above 20 would indicate renewed hedging demand and possible risk-off repositioning in equities. |
| Brent crude threshold | $100/bbl | Sustained above $100 risks a pass-through to inflation expectations and transport cost assumptions embedded in Q2 guidance. |
| Tesla after-hours reaction | EPS $0.41 beat | Magnitude of after-hours move will set the tone for Nasdaq futures overnight; management guidance on the earnings call is the key variable. |
Wednesday’s session demonstrated the market’s capacity to rally sharply when geopolitical overhang lifts and corporate fundamentals confirm. Whether Thursday can sustain a fresh record depends on the durability of the ceasefire, the overnight Hormuz situation, and whether the next wave of earnings results maintains the exceptional 85% beat rate that has defined the spring reporting season.
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.

