Sunday, May 3, 2026

WEEKEND WRAP: It's All Wrong and You're Just Beginning to Notice; Governments Are Killing Entire Economies: U.S. National Average Gas: $4.45

Government, always and everywhere, are obnoxious. President Trump is merely the most recent manifestation of bad behavior.

Whether the ruling powers of a nation, territory, tribe, state, city, county or any other superficial construct created by people with the power to create sovereignty be cloaked in the colors of democracy, socialism, communism, fascism or any other "ism", the goals are the same: to Thwart the will of the people, to steal their wealth and resources, and to enslave working men and women, their ilk, and their progeny.

The ultimate aim of government everywhere is to enrich those in positions of power by taxation and confiscation of other people's wealth via laws, regulations, tariffs and doctrines. They tax and regulate income, property, and resources endlessly, and by this means drain the wealth of entire populations gradually, but ultimately effectively.

Take the United States for example. At all levels, government taxes, borrows, and spends the wealth of the submissive population to further their own ends, pocketing a percentage here, a fee there, a regulation or tariff everywhere. As government has grown into a self-inflating, self-perpetuating behemoth, its minions, the so-called "public servants" are rewarded with salaries and benefits that far exceed those enjoyed by the public. They are paid to carry water for the elitist elected officials and do their bidding at the expense of the people they are ostensibly supposed to be serving.

They are all parasites, otherwise unemployable and worthless, having no skills other beyond those of common con men or paper-pushers and have the power of law and doctrine to enforce their will over those of the general public.

Any person living within the confines of government - and that would be every man, woman, and child in the world outside of aboriginal tribespeople in far away places - would better their lot in life with an understanding that the government is not there to protect them, nor to aid them in any manner, but to sublimate their will and use their labor and capital to further their own intentions.

One would not be blind to the government's reach into every aspect of their lives: how they live, what they buy, with whom they associate. One would be well-served to keep government at arm's length or further away from one's private affairs, of which government has no business. The goal of the empowered individual would be wise to be silent as to one's holdings or wealth, measured in property, well-being, and capacity to live free, to keep what is rightfully theirs, unencumbered and unknown to the government monstrosity.

It's a tough task that takes a man or woman's full life and effort, but it essential to ensure proper prosperity and liberty.

Americans and most everybody living within the modern constructs of advanced societies need to be aware that government will take a generally large percentage of one's wealth if allowed to do so. Ordinary people are cajoled and encouraged to engage in "wealth-building" in the institutionalized mechanisms of banking, stocks, bonds, annuities, insurance, and properties, all of which, beyond basic personal and real property, are unnecessary and a means by which the government taxes and confiscates wealth.

Avoidance of these accepted, annoying nuisances provides a pathway to economic and personal freedom.

Real property, collectibles of value, precious metals, and profitable private business operations are essential to well-being.

The tropes promoted by governments, media, and their salespeople are corrosive, subject to vast mis-valuation, and confiscatable.

Stocks

Who gets played?

The NASDAQ composite has finished positive in 19 of the past 23 sessions.

After having risen 13 out of 15 sessions from the end of March, the Dow Transportation Average finished negative seven of the last eight sessions.

Dip buyers were handsomely rewarded. Overall, it's a rotten game. Those who choose to play only at the margins, via buy and hold tactical strategies, are allowed a free ride on the stock market roller coaster. Stock specificity and allocation allotments are mild tolls of the passive investor, those whose only worry is having enough to last until their ultimate demise. Willingly trapped into the system, they facilitate the government's ultimate tax skimming superstructure.

Good doggies. Now, go lay down.

The Shiller PE ratio (CAPE) stood at 41.06 at the close of trading Friday, a level second only to the level of 44.19 reached at the peak of the dotcom spike in December 1999. The financial apparatus supporting such extremes is well aware of the incredible gap between price and value and will continue the crusade to ever more unsustainable levels. The game goes on. The financialization of the economy is nearly complete; the welfare/warfare state in control.

For those still drooling at the font of fiat, the week ahead will be loaded to the gills with earnings reports.

Monday: (before open) Norwegian Cruise Lines (NCLH), Tyson (TSN), Berkshire-Hathaway (BRK.B); (after close) Pinterest (PINS), Transocean (RIG), Palantir (PLTR)

Tuesday: (before open) Pfizer (PFE), PayPal (PYPL), Marathon (MPC), Shopify (SHOP); (after close) AMC (AMC), Strategy (MSTR), Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)

Wednesday: (before open) KraftHeinz (KHC), Uber (UBER), CVS Health (CVS), Novo Nordisk (NVO), Walt Disney (DIS); (after close) Applovin (APP), Snap Inc. (SNAP), Beyond Meat (BYND), Dutch Bros. (BROS), Coinbase (COIN)

Thursday: (before open) McDonald's (MCD), Celsius (CELH); (after close) Affirm (AFRM), Opendoor (OPEN)

Friday: (before open) Enbridge (ENB), Wendy's (WEN)

Friday, May 8, the BLS trots out the latest made-up employment numbers with the April Non-farm Payroll Report (begging the question of what is farm employment looking like?).

Volatility continues, upside momentum is nearing conclusion. "Sell in May and Go Away" motif may be a suitable motif, urging profit-taking.

One final note: Spirit Airlines, with a business model catering to low-income fliers, has gone bankrupt. A lesson for us all.

Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
03/27/2026 3.74 3.73 3.72 3.73 3.72 3.75 3.77
04/03/2026 3.71 3.73 3.73 3.71 3.71 3.73 3.72
04/10/2026 3.67 3.69 3.70 3.69 3.69 3.72 3.70
04/17/2026 3.69 3.70 3.73 3.70 3.69 3.69 3.64
04/24/2026 3.69 3.72 3.71 3.69 3.69 3.71 3.67
05/01/2026 3.71 3.71 3.70 3.68 3.76 3.71 3.73

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
03/27/2026 3.88 3.94 4.06 4.25 4.44 4.99 4.98
04/03/2026 3.84 3.88 3.99 4.17 4.35 4.91 4.91
04/10/2026 3.81 3.80 3.94 4.12 4.31 4.89 4.91
04/17/2026 3.71 3.72 3.84 4.04 4.26 4.85 4.88
04/24/2026 3.78 3.80 3.92 4.10 4.31 4.88 4.91
05/01/2026 3.88 3.91 4.02 4.20 4.39 4.96 4.97

Now that Chairman Jerome Powell is done and gone after Wednesday's "stand down" on interest rate policy, the 30-year yield is getting darn close to five percent. Once it heads beyond that, some little dose of non-reality will be needed to "calm markets."

Any rational investor would likely believe the yield on 30-year paper loaned to a government that is nearly $40 trillion in debt and can't stop spending should be closer to eight percent, or, a loan not made. Due diligence matters, and the U.S. government is a deadbeat. In 30 years, it's likely to be even still dead and more beaten. Like everything else in fantasy finance, the 30-year is a trade, based solely on what the underlying security will bring in three to six months. Nobody in their rigt mind would hold government paper at under five percent for the duration.

Everything within the treasury yield curve is cockeyed. If one can get 3.71% risk-free on a one-month bill, why in the world risk anything for any longer unless the yield is significantly higher? The answer lies in the full spectrum spread from 30 days out to 30 years. It reached +126 this week, a nominal high, and appears to be pointing higher, so, when Kevin Warsh becomes the new Fed head and begins lowering rates to accommodate more spending by the government (Trump loves low rates (and inflation)), the spread will expand to probably well beyond 200 basis points (2.00%), which would satisfy the desires of both the government and the heavy money in the 30-year market. Government borrowing on the short end at less than three percent and 30-year bonds at 5.50% gets the juice flowing in exactly the right direction to grease both Wall Street and Federal .gov machinery at the same time. What a world.

BTW: the 2s-10s spread, this week at +51, has become meaningless untill it approaches zero. While it's not even close yet, the trend is your friend. Inversion by December appears baked into the yield cake.

Spreads:

2s-10s
2026
1/2: +72
1/9: +64
1/16: +65
1/23: +64
1/30: +74
2/6: +72
2/13: +64
2/20: +60
2/27: +59
3/6: +59
3/13: +55
3/20: +51
3/27: +56
4/3: +51
4/10: +50
4/17: +55
4/24: +53
5/1: +51

Full Spectrum (30-days - 30-years)
2026
1/2: +114
1/9: +112
1/16: +108
1/23: +104
1/30: +115
2/6: +113
2/13: +97
2/20: +100
2/27: +90
3/6: +102
3/13: +115
3/20: +123
3/27: +124
4/3: +120
4/10: +124
4/17: +119
4/24: +122
5/1: +126

Oil/Gas

WTI Crude Oil finished the week in New York at $102.50, just a little higher than last week's close of $94.88. Two weeks ago it was $84.00. The high this week was $110.09. If President Trump doesn't come to his senses soon and get the hell out of the Middle East, end the moronic, just-for-show "blockade", WTI crude will ramp up to $150.

Some people, including many prominent financial and political pundits, seem to believe that Trump cares about the fate of the Republican party in the November midterms and will do everything he can to lower the price of oil and gas in the U.S. to ensure majorities in the House and Senate.

This is a dangerous fallacy. Trump could care less about Republicans or Democrats or the House and Senate. He's a lame duck interested in padding his already grotesque bank account and little more. Getting the price of oil out of the $55-65 range was a priority and he's already done that. Keeping crude well above $100 and gas closer to $5.00 than to $3.50 is next on his agenda, paying off political dues to the people who matter, heavily invested in energy commodities and the companies that gouge serve American drivers.

Average price for a gallon of unleaded regular gasoline in the U.S. was $4.07 last week and $4.45 this week. Americans are getting lubed, good and hard, and without so much as a reach-around. Thank you President Bone-spurs.

Prices in key states:

California (leader): $6.10 (+0.16) Yippie! for the Golden State!
Washington: $5.66 (+0.22)
Oklahoma (lowest): $3.85 (+0.38)
Florida: $3.34 (+0.42)
Illinois: $4.93 (+0.62)
Pennsylvania: $4.52 (+0.37)
New York: $4.43 (+0.29)
Maryland: $4.26 (+0.27)
Michigan: $4.87 (+0.86)
Texas: $3.89 (+0.26)
Georgia: $3.83 (+0.24)

On Sunday, May 3rd, there are 13 states with average prices below $4.00, and 35 above the $4 threshold, not including Hawaii ($5.60, -0.04) and Alaska ($5.04, +0.29), and three above $5 (Nevada, Washington, Oregon), and one above $6 (California). The Midwest and Southeast have equalized over the past two weeks as the lowest-priced regions, with prices averaging roughly the same in states like South Dakota, Iowa and Kansas as opposed to Tennessee, Georgia and Mississippi.

Bitcoin

This week: $78,694.80
Last week: $77,941.15
2 weeks ago: $75,748.31
6 months ago: $106,774.80
One year ago: $95,816.94
Five years ago: $58,815.15

Crypto is absolute trash. Witness the dumping by the Trump family in their own meme coins and various business ventures in the space. Now would be a good time to sell, if you're dumb enough to have any.

Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 61.23; last week: 62.27

Futures, per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 4/3: $4,702.70
Gold price 4/10: $4,771.00
Gold price 4/17: $4,849.40
Gold price 4/24: $4,725.40
Gold price 5/1: $4,625.60

Silver price 4/3: $73.17
Silver price 4/10: $76.03
Silver price 4/17: $81.58
Silver price 4/24: $76.19
Silver price 5/1: $75.84

SPOT:
(stockcharts.com)
Gold 4/3: $4,677.28
Gold 4/10: $4,751.68
Gold 4/17: $4,833.56
Gold 4/24: $4,709.27
Gold 5/1: $4,612.97

Silver 4/3: $73.02
Silver 4/10: $75.95
Silver: 4/17: $80.75
Silver 4/24: $75.63
Silver 5/1: $75.34

Stackers and bugs are still getting shafted by the COMEX/LBMA riggers, a condition that appears to be nearing an end, though the interested parties are sure to not go down without a fight of some significance. Many complaints are being lodged by individual sellers not getting anything near spot for their holdings at dealers. Many do better on eBay, though the 15-20% vig negates much of the profit.

The physical market is sending a clear signal to hold. Buying, near, at, or above spot is probably OK, given a long enough time horizon. Otherwise, buying scrap or items containing gold and silver, like watches, jewelry, silverware, trinkets, etc. at estate and garage sales is becoming a buyer's market if one knows what they're doing. People who are selling are either desperate or stupid or both, so buying well below spot on a meltdown value basis can be fun and extremely profitable. Getting the loot is just beginning to be a grand game.

Here are the most recent prices for common one ounce gold and silver items sold on eBay (free shipping included, numismatics excluded):

Item/Price Low High Average Median
1 oz silver coin: 76.00 96.75 85.58 85.53
1 oz silver bar: 81.00 91.61 87.24 86.55
1 oz gold coin: 4687.60 4954.98 4795.08 4794.99
1 oz gold bar: 4804.98 4935.11 4844.05 4839.79

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) fell for a second straight week, to $86.23, a loss of $1.71 from the April 26 price of $87.94 per troy ounce.

WEEKEND WRAP

Governments suck, and the current ones, with tax rates, when one considers all degrees of the totality of income, property, sales, and hidden excise taxes (gas, phone, all kinds of services) well over 40-50% of one's gross income, suck very much harder. The insane levels of money going to government will bankrupt what's left of the middle class and begin to wreak havoc on the final 10% of top earners.

Inflation is about to explode higher. Keep what's yours. Let the government kill itself. Don’t go down with it.

At the Close, Friday, May 1, 2026:
Dow: 49,499.27, -152.87 (-0.31%)
NASDAQ: 25,114.44, +222.13 (+0.89%)
S&P 500: 7,230.12, +21.11 (+0.29%)
NYSE Composite: 23,041.15, -103.50 (-0.45%)

For the Week:
Dow: +268.56 (+0.55%)
NASDAQ: +277.84 (+1.12%)
S&P 500: +65.04 (+0.91%)
NYSE Composite: +106.60 (+0.46%)
Dow Transports: -273.98 (-1.41%)



Disclaimer: Information disseminated on this site should not be construed as investment advice. Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily and it's owners, affiliates and/or employees are not investment advisors and do not offer specific investment advice. All investments have risk. You should consult a professional investment advisor or stock broker or use your individual judgement when making investment decisions. By viewing this site, you hold harmless Downtown Magazine Inc., Money Daily, its owners, affiliates and employees against any and all liability. Copyright 2026, Downtown Magazine Inc., all rights reserved.

Friday, May 1, 2026

ExxonMobile, Chevron Post Profits on Higher Oil, Gas Prices; CNBC Claims They Didn't Profit from War; Gas is Over $6.00 in Cali; $4.41 National Average

The order of the day is outrage.

Just a little bit, on the side, to go with your main course of failing to keep up with the cost of living.

The average price of a gallon of gas in the U.S. is $4.41, according to gasbuddy.com. A year ago, that price was $3.17, a 39% increase. For those unfortunate enough to be living on or near the west coast, average gas prices are above $5 in Washington, Oregon, and Nevada, and $6.04 in California.

Friday morning, ExxonMobil (XOM) and Chevron (CVX), America's two oil giants (or, in Wall Street parlance: "supermajors") posted first quarter results.

CNBC blared this headline:

Exxon Mobil and Chevron earnings fall as Iran war disrupts oil shipments

ExxonMobile reported a net profit of $4.2 billion. Chevron reported net income of $2.2 billion.

But wait, there's more!

Exxon’s net income declined 45%, while Chevron’s tumbled 36%. Ohh! Poor babies! However, both companies recorded charges in the quarter to offset losses related to "unfavorable financial hedges", so, adjusted earnings per share for both companies beat estimates handily.

Chevron earned $1.41 per share to beat Wall Street’s estimates of 95 cents. It was the biggest earnings beat since October 2020. ExxonMobile's adjusted first-quarter net income of $1.16 a share was 20 cents higher than the average Bloomberg estimate.

Ding! Ding! Ding! Winner, winner, chicken dinner. Shares of both stocks are steady in pre-market trading even though Exxon’s net income declined 45%, while Chevron’s tumbled 36%, according to the best bean-counting, tax fraud accountants money can buy.

Americans must think that all of this is just swell. While Joe and Jane Sixpack spend about 40% more to fuel up their monster trucks, Big Oil makes nice profits, which is always the case, except this time, CNBC proudly states, "Surging oil prices due to the Iran war did not result in a windfall for Exxon Mobil and Chevron in the first quarter."

No, nobody profits from war. Never, ever.

But wait, there's even more!

Certain rational people might think it's time to buy an electric vehicle and charge it with one's very own rooftop solar system. Great idea, except that all the tax credits for installing solar have expired and buying a BYD or other efficient Chinese-made EV will cost double in the U.S. thanks to President Trump's 100% tariff on EVs imported from China, because, "drill, baby drill" and "China bad."

Nice timing.

It's OK. Stocks made new all-time highs on Thursday and the Shiller PE struck a new tone at 40.94, so everything's just fine.

At the Close, Thursday, April 30, 2026:
Dow: 49,652.14, +790.33 (+1.62%)
NASDAQ: 24,892.31, +219.07 (+0.89%)
S&P 500: 7,209.01, +73.06 (+1.02%)
NYSE Composite: 23,144.64, +393.13 (+1.73%)



Thursday, April 30, 2026

Mag Seven Stocks Flat Overall; 1Q GDP Reported at 2%; Annual PCE, 3.5%, highest in 2.5 years; Gallon of Gas Hits $4.31, Highest in Four Years

The war that was supposed to take a weekend to win, or four weeks, or maybe more, is now two months deep. Never mind that the U.S. and Iran haven't actually been shooting things at each other for the past three weeks; both parties are still engaged in a war of words, memes, truths, tweets, and Lego™ videos. Both sides are contributing to keeping the Strait of Hormuz closed, doing severe damage to the global economy. It's becoming not only pointless, but even self-defeating, especially for the U.S., which, for all intents and purposes has lost the war. At the very least the U.S. hasn't won anything.

Israel, which bears responsibility for starting the war, continues to clean up the mess that Iran made of Tel Aviv and other areas. That's a best guess, since media silence is the the Zionist approach to winning hearts and minds.

It was a stupid idea. After an unhealthy amount of death and destruction has been inflicted on all sides, it really needs to stop, but it won't, mostly because the neocons in Washington and President Trump can't accept defeat and haven't figured out how to proclaim victory in a way that Fox News can present as reasonable.

In the end, regular folks, taxpayers, voters, end up with the short stick... in the eye.

On the domestic front, Wednesday was rather busy, though, in the end, after all of the bluster and anticipation, the FOMC rate policy announcement and first quarter earnings reports from Alphabet (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta Platforms (META) cold be summed up neatly by Shakespeare, in Macbeth's one-liner:

"It is a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing."

The FOMC sat on its collective hands, holding the federal funds target rate at 3.50-3.75%. Blah. The meeting was the last one to be chaired by Jerome Powell. In the Senate, the Banking Committee advanced Kevin Warsh's nomination to chair the Fed to the full chamber. He's likely to pass, though not without an extra dose of that "sound and fury" hot air that regularly escapes from the Capitol.

The net effect of four of the Magnificent Seven stocks reporting after the close on the same day, was negligible. Pre-market, Alphabet (GOOG) is up eight percent, Amazon (AMZN) is up three percent, Microsoft (MSFT) is down one percent, and Meta Platforms (META) is down nine percent. In an imaginary portfolio with equal weights of all four, the overall gain would be a one percent gain (8+3-1-9=1). Not a big deal.

A few more household names reported after the close, including:
Qualcomm (QCOM) - small earnings beat (+0.10), weak guidance, shares up 9%
Ford (F) - beat, raises expectations, shares down 4.5%
Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG) - surprised by sales growth, stock is up 4.5%

If that isn't enough, Thursday, before the open:
Caterpillar (CAT) - Huge revenue gains, shares up 7%
Valero (VLO) - Positive forecast, shares down 1%
Wayfair (W) - Revenue gains, net loss, stock down 5%
ConocoPhillips (COP) - Lowers outlook, stock down 2%
Lilly (LLY) - top, bottom beat, up 6%
Mastercard (MA) - beat, international slowdown, down 2%
Altria (MO) - smoky, cloudy, up 3%
Merck (MRK) - in line, small beat, up 1%
Bristol Meyers Squibb (BMY) - bullish, flat

A little excitement and lots of numbers for investors to chew on this morning, but one that should be the headline came from the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) with their advance estimate of first quarter GDP, coming in at two percent after posting +0.5% in the fourth quarter of 2025.

Two percent growth does not make the USA the "hottest" country on the planet, as the Boaster-in-Chief likes to say. Even if one takes the grossly exaggerated 2nd and 3rd quarters of 2025 at 3.8% and 4.4%, the past four quarters come in at +2.675%, which would relate more or less to stumbling around, rather than setting the world on fire.

The Commerce Department reported CPE, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, rising at a rate of 3.5%, the highest in nearly three years. So much for the Fed's target of two percent; it hasn't been that low for five years running.

In case you like your country "hot", remember that inflation is being brought to you by the president that promised lower prices. The average price of a gallon of unleaded regular gasoline at the pump is now $4.31. Hot enough? It's going higher, probably much higher, along with the price of everything else.

It may not be so good to be so hot.

At the Close, Wednesday, April 29, 2026:
Dow: 48,861.81, -280.12 (-0.57%)
NASDAQ: 24,673.24, +9.44 (+0.04%)
S&P 500: 7,135.95, -2.85 (-0.04%)
NYSE Composite: 22,751.51, -84.08 (-0.37%)



Wednesday, April 29, 2026

Trump Mocks Iran Again; Seagate Soars 15% Pre-Market; Fed Rate Decision at 2 pm; Four of Mag7 Stocks Report After Bell Wednesday

As if the world needed more bare bones barbarism from the United States, President Trump posted on Truth Social - complete with the photo at right - the following this morning:

Iran can’t get their act together. They don’t know how to sign a nonnuclear deal. They better get smart soon! President DJT

Diplomacy, American style. The rest of the world doesn't realize that most actual Americans are not this stupid.

Earnings season is in full swing.

After the close Tuesday these companies posted first quarter results:
Starbucks (SBUX) - Earnings beat, strong guidance, stock up 5% pre-market
Teradyne (TER) - solid earnings, stock down 9%, PE 109. Any questions?
Visa (V) - earnings beat, stock up 5.5%
Robinhood (HOOD) - bad earnings miss on crypto drag, shares off 9%
Mondelez (MDLZ) - snacks company cites emerging market growth, stock up 2%
Seagate (STX) - Data storage company rips on earnings beat, optimistic forecast, shares up 15%

Wednesday morning, a few more hit the wires, including:
Yum! Brands (YUM) - earnings beat on Taco Bell surge, shares up 1%
Humana (HUM) - Earnings in line, Medicare pays the bills, stock down 2%
Avis (CAR) - earnings miss (EPS -8.01), ripe for short, down 18% pre-market
Abbvie (ABBV) - Big Pharma afterthought, shares up 1% in line
SoFi (SOFI) - reports solid growth, re-affirms guidance, stock down 8%
Regeneron (REGN) - Overvalued pharma, beat, shares up 1%

Judging from the results, there are more than just a few institutional investors bailing on big name stocks like Teradyne, Sofi, Avis, and Robinhood, and nobody can really blame them for not approving of a company's under-performance.

On the other side of the coin, piling into a stock at the center of the AI surge - Seagate - might be pushing the envelope a little too far. Seagate will vault to over $600 a share Wednesday morning, making it a 7-bagger in just one year. Last April 29, Seagate was a $91 stock. This kind of massive run higher suggests a very overcrowded momentum trade with the stock sitting on a PE ratio upwards of 60.

While Seagate has consistently improved earnings over the past 12 months, it's going to take a lot more profit over the next four quarters to justify that level of valuation. Given the stock market of 2026 is all about chasing yield and little more, Seagate could top 750 by the end of this quarter, or, should AI mania fade, drop a couple hundred points in a panic selling situation.

The companies that reported overnight are substantial, but they hold a back seat to those reporting after the bell Wednesday - and after the FOMC announcement at 2:00 pm ET today. Four of the Magnificent Seven stocks - Alphabet (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta Platforms (META) - will report after the close today. Expect plenty of volatility in those names prior to the after-market reveals.

Trump needs to get the incident in the Middle East over and done with, but he won't, because he and almost all of the U.S. congress is inexorably lashed to Israel. Sever those ties and the world would be much better off. The oil that left the Strait of Hormuz before March 1 has already reached destinations. Behind those tankers is a trickle, not enough to keep oil prices from spiking, no matter what the U.S. and Iran decide to do. Shortages are due, and they are going to be extreme.

Waiting until the crisis becomes real and then panicking is not a winning strategy, but that's exactly what most investors are doing.

At the Close, Tuesday, April 28, 2026:
Dow: 49,141.93, -25.86 (-0.05%)
NASDAQ: 24,663.80, -223.30 (-0.90%)
S&P 500: 7,138.80, -35.11 (-0.49%)
NYSE Composite: 22,835.59, -69.87 (-0.31%)



Tuesday, April 28, 2026

Pizza and a Drink: Domino's Down, Coke Up, as Food Retailers Confront Inflation, Competition; Rambus (RMBS), Spotify (SPOT) Slaughtered in Earnings Rout

With Middle East media coverage slowed to a crawl, Wall Street turns to first quarter earnings reports for trading inspiration, and there's plenty to choose from this week.

Monday, prior to the opening bell, Domino’s Pizza (DPZ) and Verizon (VZ) reported, with the bad news coming from the pizza-maker, which saw same store sales well below expectations, citing heavier competition (Pizza Hut, Papa John's), and issued guidance of just 1-2% same store gains the rest of the year. The stock slumped pre-market and the bad attitude carried over into the cash session, with Domino's falling nearly nine percent on the day.

Verizon fared better, though despite beats top and bottom, the stock started the day higher but ended lower. After a big run-up in late January, the stock seems to have stalled out in the mid-40s.

After the close on Monday, the following reported:
Rambus (RMBS) - General investor disappointment at the chip tech company, down 19% pre-market.
Lending Club (LC) - earnings beat, profits record, shares up 10%
Nucor (NUE) - Steel prices lift profits, shares ahead 2%

Tuesday, before the open, more reports hit the wires, including:
Hilton (HLT) - earnings beat, raises REVPAR guidance, stock slips 2%
General Motors (GM) - earnings beat estimates, company raises profit guidance after favorable tariff ruling, shares down 1%
Spotify (SPOT) - company raises prices, misses EPS estimates, shares slip 10%
Coca-Cola (KO) - Beat, raises guidance, shares up 3%
UPS (UPS) - EPS beat, revenue slips, re-affirms guidance, shares down 5%

The companies reporting so far this week have given some indications of where the economy is heading, though there are more heavy hitters up on Wednesday, coinciding with the Fed's FOMC policy announcement.

After the close Tuesday, Starbucks (SBUX), Teradyne (TER), Visa (V), Enphase (ENPH), Robinhood (HOOD), Modelez (MDLZ), and Seagate (STX) report, but after the close Wednesday, four of the Magnificent 7 send vibes, with reports from Alphabet (GOOG), Amazon (AMZN), Microsoft (MSFT), Meta Platforms (META). The leading tech companies will have much to say about the future of the US and global economy, their weight on the s&P 500 accounting for most of the gains the past two years.

When it comes to getting it right and getting it wrong, two companies that have already reported tell the story. Domino's, which happened to be the first major fast food retailer out of the box this quarter, missed the boat and had their shares sink. On the brighter side, Coca-Cola, with decades of reporting in their arsenal, managed to woo more investors by being street smart with their reporting. The two stocks have moved in opposite directions.

Another lesson for CEOs and CFOs comes from Spotify, which tried to slip in price increases during a period of slow growth and watching the bottom line closely in their niche, which includes thousands of small businesses which haven’t had a favorable break in decades and was treated poorly during the Covid experiment of choosing winners. It hasn’t gone over well and investors are voicing their concern with their feet.

With the open minutes ahead, futures are mixed, gold and silver are taking a beating via the usual, nasty, COMEX method and WTI crude oil popped over $100 in the absense of any movement to resolve the US/Israel-Iran crisis. There's growing concern that the oil shock will be the worst the world has seen, now that shipments have been crimped for nearly two months. Oil that escaped the region before March 1, is still arriving at destinations around the world, but now there will be a gap, with limited flows for the next 40-60 days as supply have been choked off, both by Iran and the U.S. There's a world of hurt coming for countries that rely on the steady flow.

At the Close, Monday, April 27, 2026:
Dow: 49,167.79, -62.92 (-0.13%)
NASDAQ: 24,887.10, +50.50 (+0.20%)
S&P 500: 7,173.91, +8.83 (+0.12%)
NYSE Composite: 22,905.46, -29.09 (-0.13%)