NEW YORK, April 27, 2026 — S&P 500 futures stabilised near 5,588 in Monday pre-market trade after reversing an early decline of as much as 0.40%, as reports that Iran had submitted a formal diplomatic proposal to reopen the Strait of Hormuz lifted sentiment across equity, crude, and Treasury markets ahead of one of the most data-dense weeks of 2026.

With no major U.S. economic releases scheduled for Monday, the session’s early narrative was dictated entirely by geopolitics. Reuters reported that Tehran’s proposal — submitted through back-channel intermediaries — signalled a willingness to de-escalate the Hormuz standoff that had pushed Brent crude above $103 per barrel as recently as last week. The news was sufficient to arrest a drift lower in risk assets that had begun in the Asian session.

For context on last week’s geopolitical pressure and its market effects, see PreMarket Daily’s midday pulse from April 23, when the S&P 500 fell 0.71% and the Nasdaq shed 1.01% as Brent hit $103 on Hormuz fears.

Data Visual
S&P 500 futures intraday swing
Shows the intraday pre-market swing in S&P 500 futures on April 27, 2026, illustrating the recovery from early geopolitical losses after the Iran Hormuz proposal.
S&P 500 futures intraday swing
Values in %

What the data showed — and what was absent

The Federal Reserve’s economic calendar is silent on Monday. The Bureau of Labor Statistics has no scheduled releases, and the Bureau of Economic Analysis is not reporting until later in the week. The Consumer Price Index for April 2026 is not due until Tuesday, May 12, while the Producer Price Index follows on May 13. The week’s primary macro catalysts are concentrated Thursday through Friday: first-quarter GDP (advance estimate), weekly jobless claims, and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the core Personal Consumption Expenditures price index — all land before the closing bell on Friday, April 30.

That data vacuum on Monday means pre-market price discovery is unusually dependent on earnings newsflow and geopolitical headlines. As PreMarket Daily’s week-ahead preview noted, the convergence of the FOMC decision, Big Tech earnings, and core PCE within a single five-day window makes this arguably the most consequential week of the second quarter.

Iran proposal: what traders need to know

The Strait of Hormuz handles roughly 20% of global seaborne oil trade. Any credible signal of de-escalation has an outsized mechanical effect on energy futures and, by extension, on inflation expectations that have kept the Federal Reserve on hold. Brent crude slipped from an overnight high of $103.80 to trade near $100.85 by 8:45 AM ET — a decline of approximately 2.8% from the session peak — as traders unwound the geopolitical risk premium that had accumulated since late March.

Key Stat
−2.8% Brent crude from overnight peak
A sustained move below $100/barrel would ease the energy-driven inflation premium that has anchored Fed rate-cut expectations in 2026.
Data Visual
Brent crude pre-market price path
Tracks Brent crude’s pre-market price on April 27, 2026, showing the pullback from recent geopolitical highs following Iran’s diplomatic overture.
Brent crude pre-market price path
Values in $

Market reaction in real time

S&P 500 futures, which touched a low of approximately 5,566 in early Asian hours, recovered steadily through the European morning and were quoted near 5,588 — essentially unchanged from Friday’s settlement — by 8:45 AM ET. Nasdaq 100 futures followed a near-identical trajectory, recovering from a −0.35% trough to trade flat. Dow Jones futures edged marginally positive, up roughly 0.05%.

Treasury markets reflected the risk-on pivot in measured fashion. The 10-year Treasury yield retreated modestly to near 4.34%, down from an early-session high of 4.39%, as safe-haven demand faded with the geopolitical headline. The two-year yield, more sensitive to Fed expectations, held near 3.92%, providing little fresh signal on the rate path.

The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) slipped 0.15% to approximately 99.20, reflecting a modest revival in risk appetite and the partial unwinding of safe-haven dollar positioning. Energy sector equities in pre-market trade gave back gains built on last week’s crude spike, with major integrated oil names trading 0.8%–1.5% lower as Brent retreated.

For a detailed look at where the broader market stood heading into this week, PreMarket Daily’s full pre-market roundup for April 27 provides comprehensive coverage of futures, sector moves, and the geopolitical backdrop.

What this means for the Fed

The Federal Reserve’s May 6–7 Federal Open Market Committee meeting looms as the week’s centrepiece policy event. Fed funds futures, as tracked by CME Group’s FedWatch tool, continue to price near-zero probability of a rate move at the May meeting, with markets assigning roughly 68% odds of the first 25-basis-point cut arriving no earlier than September 2026.

The Hormuz de-escalation, if confirmed and durable, would remove one of the most significant upside risks to near-term inflation — a factor Fed Chair Jerome Powell has cited explicitly in recent public remarks as a complication to the disinflation trajectory. A sustained decline in energy prices would feed through to both headline CPI and core PCE with a two-to-three month lag, potentially improving the inflation picture ahead of the June and July FOMC meetings.

Analyst Note
“If Brent can consolidate below $100 on a confirmed Hormuz agreement, the Fed gains optionality it simply did not have two weeks ago. That doesn’t mean a June cut is back on the table — core services inflation is still sticky — but it meaningfully reduces the tail risk of a re-acceleration that was keeping the committee cautious.” — Fixed income strategist, Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research, as cited by Bloomberg, April 27, 2026.

Separately, this week’s advance Q1 GDP print — due Thursday — will provide the first hard read on whether the U.S. economy was slowing materially before the tariff shock of early April fully fed through to business investment and consumer spending. Consensus sits near +1.4% annualised, down sharply from Q4 2025’s +2.4%. A miss on that figure would renew stagflation concerns and complicate the Fed’s already difficult communication task at next week’s press conference.

What traders are watching for the open

With the 9:30 AM ET opening bell approaching and no domestic data catalyst to anchor price action, traders are focused on several technical and event-driven levels as the session begins.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 futures support 5,566 Overnight session low; a break below reopens the path to 5,520 and the 50-day moving average.
S&P 500 futures resistance 5,610 Break above on volume could trigger momentum buying toward the record 5,650 area set last week.
Brent crude pivot $100.00 Psychological round number; sustained trade below reduces inflation risk premium in equities and Treasuries.
10-year Treasury yield 4.34% A move above 4.40% would signal renewed inflation concern; a drop below 4.25% would support equity multiples.
DXY dollar index 99.20 Below 99.00 would extend dollar weakness, supporting commodity prices and multinational earnings revisions.

Beyond technicals, earnings remain a primary driver. Microsoft reports after Tuesday’s close, followed by Meta Platforms on Wednesday, then Apple and Amazon on Thursday. CNBC’s earnings tracker shows consensus expecting Microsoft to report fiscal Q3 revenue of approximately $68.4 billion and EPS of $3.22. Any guidance commentary on AI infrastructure spending — particularly Azure capacity build-out — is expected to set the tone for the broader technology sector into May.

Intel’s extraordinary run through last week also remains in traders’ peripheral vision. As PreMarket Daily’s Intel deep dive from April 26 documented, INTC closed at $82.73, up 124% year-to-date, following 11 separate analyst upgrades in the wake of a 2,800% EPS beat. Whether that momentum can be sustained through a week where competing mega-cap earnings will dominate the tape is a key subplot heading into Monday’s open.

Conclusion: A session defined by what isn’t there

Monday, April 27 is unusual precisely because of its absence of scheduled macro catalysts. No BLS release, no Fed speaker, no Treasury auction of consequence — and yet the session has already produced material price action, driven entirely by a diplomatic headline from the Persian Gulf. That dynamic underscores how thoroughly geopolitical risk has displaced traditional economic data as the marginal driver of pre-market sentiment in 2026.

The Iran Hormuz proposal has done enough to stabilise futures near Friday’s close, but stability is not the same as conviction. Traders approaching the 9:30 AM open face a session where price action will likely be range-bound absent a fresh geopolitical development or an unexpected pre-market earnings surprise. Volume may prove thinner than usual for a Monday, as institutional desks hold their positioning cards close ahead of five days that will deliver more macro and earnings information than almost any comparable period this year.

For the Federal Reserve, the diplomatic development is genuinely relevant. A durable Hormuz agreement would materially reduce the energy-price tail risk that has complicated the committee’s inflation assessment since March. Combined with a consensus-or-softer core PCE print on Friday and a Q1 GDP reading that confirms the anticipated growth slowdown without cratering into contraction, the conditions for a September rate cut could begin to solidify in next week’s FOMC statement language — even if Chair Powell is unlikely to telegraph anything explicitly at the post-meeting press conference.

The week ahead is the week that defines the half. Every piece of it matters. Monday is the calm before it begins.


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 a pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily with a focus on overnight futures, early session movers, and the catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. He tracks S&P 500,...