Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Stocks Continue Upward on Strong Momentum. Hewlett Packard Enterprise, Victoria's Secret Each Up More then 30% Pre-Market

The first trading session of June started out just the way most other sessions on the stock market have this year, with an upside move that left the major indices at all-time closing highs. The momentum that has carried the stocks for months - AI, war, Donald Trump tweets - all added to the festivities, but, in the end, the gains were insignificant. Eventually, as with all bubble rallies - and this being the biggest of all - there will come a top. It could be today, tomorrow, or any day in the future.

Current indications are that stocks have not reached the apex point. The Shiller PE (CAPE) added another 0.12, closing the day at 42.78, inching ever closer to the all-time high of 44.19 (Dec. 1999). One would be well-served to keep a close eye on the Shiller PE, as it is nearly a certainty that the current rally in stocks will send it to the ultimate all-time record. Figuring somewhere around a range 47-50 on this measure would call for the top above 8,000 on the S&P, with the possibility of a slight pullback before galloping into the stock market stratosphere. It is simply too easy to buy, take gains, and reinvest without any pretense of risk or valuation. The entire market is hyped with momentum and that momentum is not about to slow down. Not before the Shiller PE reaches a fresh all-time high should anybody be considering selling and staying out of the market. Selling and re-investing profits is absolutely the trade today, and likely for months ahead.

after the close Monday, Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE) reported first quarter earnings, skyrocketing 30% on the company's biggest earnings beat since 2018. This kind of bounce higher has been de rigeur for many tech and tech-related stocks. Gains of 10% or more on earnings announcements have drive stocks to incredible heights. One most recent was Dell, which soared more han 100 points - from 318 to 321 - on Friday of last week (May 29). Nothing short of an outright doubling (100% gain) in one day is surprising in this environment.

Tuesday before the open, a few more companies reported: Victoria's Secret (VSCO) - shares up 40% on blowout quarter Signet Jewelers (SIG) - higher Q1 profit than estimated, company raises outlook, stock up 7% pre-market Donaldson Filtrations Systems (DCI) - record sales, raises forecast, shares ahead by 2% Dollar General (DG) - earnings beat, raises forecat, shares up 5%

From the looks of just these few reports, it would appear that the good times are not limited to only the tech sector, though reinvested money from profitable trades in that sector may be spilling over into other parts of the market, in particular, consumer goods, as illustrated by Victoria's Secret, Signet Jewelers, and Dollar General just today.

While the idea that shoppers are looking for food bargains might scare off some potential trades, the counterweight is supplied by the other two stocks, hawking lingerie and bling. From that perspective, the money spigot is wide open (thanks largely to a $2 trillion budget deficit in the government's 2026 fiscal year. More hits from the ever-ready-to-spend U.S. congress are sure to keep coming.

Never mind that there are two wars underway. In fact, the conflicts in Ukraine and the Mideast align rightly with the welfare/warfare national economy firing on all cylinders.

The party continues, even in gold and silver, which are both sporting gains of one percent or more this morning. Futures are pointing in terms of opposite direction, however, with Dow futures off 200 points, NASDAQ futures down 33, and S&P futures down 14 points. After Monday's high of $94, WTI crude futures are back down to bouncing around $91. Nobody is willing to panic at this point, even though much of the global oil infrastructure has been severely damaged and flows out of the Persian Gulf have slowed to a crawl.

All the same, it seems, except for bitcoin, which is getting slaughtered, down below $70,000 right after Strategy CEO Michael Saylor sold a load of the cyrpto "asset."

At the Close, Monday, June 1, 2026:
Dow: 51,078.88, +46.42 (+0.09%)
NASDAQ: 27,086.81, +114.19 (+0.42%)
S&P 500: 7,599.96, +19.90 (+0.26%)
NYSE Composite: 23,335.16, +42.99 (+0.18%)



Sunday, May 31, 2026

WEEKEND WRAP: Iran-U.S. Stalemate Has Brought Oil and Gas Prices Down Though Future Remains Uncertain; Gold, Silver Stuck in Ranges; Employment Numbers Out Friday

As has been the case for weeks, the White House continues to tease peace negotiations with Iran, without any tangible results. The administration continues to reject Iran's various responses and demands with impunity. One would almost believe that the U.S. simply doesn't want to make a deal or come to any kind of semi-permanent structural agreement with Iran, the U.S. faction always backpedaling to cries of "Iran can't have a nuclear weapon!"

Not wishing to be swayed by U.S. demands, the Iranians continue to harp on about sovereignty, rights, and obligations to their people concerning enrichment of nuclear material which they do not desire to relinquish. That appears to be the main sticking point, neither side seemingly incapable of making concessions on the issue.

So, that's the way it's likely to stay, neither side giving in; the Iranians having a degree of control over what passes through the Strait of Hormuz and the Americans having some control over what continues through the Gulf of Oman and into the Indian Ocean via their blockade. Both sides appear content with that arrangement, for now.

The standoff could extend much further into the future than most analysts believe. It is n't hard to imagine the U.S. and Iran remaining in a long-lasting feud stretching past the midterms and into 2027. From a historical perspective, that is exactly what should happen. There was a war, however short and brutal, that is merely suspended by a tenuous ceasefire. Both sides continue to take potshots and random attacks, falling short of anything that would trigger a resumption of full military action. The U.S. can't get its navy close enough to Iran's shoreline to affect any kind of military retreat and Iran has essentially no navy or air force by which to wage an oceanic confrontation. The U.S. lacks the willingness to attempt a ground invasion and has no place safe enough to assemble the necessary force in advance of an invasion, besides it being a suicide mission.

That's the nutshell version. There's certainly more going on behind the scenes that neither side is willing to disclose publicly, but, considering the logistical implications, countries highly dependent on imported oil from the Middle East will find themselves short-shrifted and facing rationing and shutdowns of industry. The U.S. doesn't care. They have all the oil and energy resources they need. Iran does as well. Nothing in the calculus of the global energy infrastructure is going to change the situation in any reasonable manner.

There will be crisis management in most countries at some level, but, there's still enough oil coming from other places to compensate. The U.S. is more than willing to sell oil to anybody, even China, for instance, and they've managed ot keep prices in the U.S. at somewhat manageable, though high, levels.

Two things for certain about the end game: Inflation and slower productivity, perhaps recession in many countries all within the same time frame. Play on.

Stocks

Another banner week for stocks sent the Dow, NASDAQ, and S&P to record levels.

There's so much loose money afloat that any thoughts of shorting the market or seeking a dip by which to buy in seem like pure pie-in-the-sky pipe dreams. Profitable trades are turned right back into more speculation and momentum-building. With gold and silver stalled at fairly high levels and treasuries becoming an orphan to the system, stocks are actually a reasonable place to invest, if one can hold one's nose long enough to discourage thoughts about valuations and fundamentals.

It's a party so long as the government continues its runaway deficit spending and the Fed doesn't push back hard against rising levels of inflation. The Shiller PE ended the week at 42.66, the highest level since April, 2000, and the second-highest on record. Anybody who pays the slightest bit of attention to this measure can clearly understand the mechanism by which stock markets are functioning, highly-inflated valuations serving a momentum trade for the ages. All indications are pointing to higher stock prices amid an inflationary environment that is setting people's hair on fire, in grocery stores, gas stations, and just about everywhere else.

It's not going to stop until it does. The trick is to get out somewhere near the top because history teaches that there will undoubtably be a top, followed by a massive unwinding. Bear with it.

The week ahead brings more stragglers reporting first quarter 2026 results. The focus will be mostly on Dollar General on Tuesday, and Macy's on Wednesday. Lululemon will get some play from the trendy workout apparel crowd Thursday.

Monday: (before open) SAIC (SAIC); (after close) Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), Credo (CRDO)

Tuesday: (before open) Victoria's Secret (VSCO), Signet Jewelers (SIG), Donaldson Filtrations Sstems (DCI), Dollar General (DG); (after close) PicPay (PICS), PetMeds (PETS), Gitlab (GTLB), Paloalto Netowrks (PANW), Ulta Beauty (ULTA), Sportsman's Warehouse (SPWH)

Wednesday: (before open) Medtronic (MDT), Macy's (M), Ollie's ((OLLI), THOR (THO); (after close) Five Below (FIVE), Petco (WOOF), Broadcom (AVGO), Crowdstrike (CRWD)

Thursday: (before open) Brown Forman (BF.B), Ciena (CIEN), Toro (TTC); (after close) Lululemon (LULU), Docusign (DOCU)

Friday: (before open) ABM (AMM)

Relevant data releases can be found at Trading View. Highlights include Tuesday's JOLTS (job openings), ADP's Private Employer Report for May on Wednesday, Challenger Job Cuts and the Fed Balance Sheet on Thursday, and the May Non-Farm Payroll release prior to the market opening Friday. Non-farm payrolls for May 2026 are expected to increase modestly, with consensus estimates around +60,000 jobs and the unemployment rate likely remaining near 4.4%, with the analyst range between zero and +95,000.

Treasury Yield Curve Rates

Date 1 Mo 1.5 mo 2 Mo 3 Mo 4 Mo 6 Mo 1 Yr
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
05/08/2026 3.71 3.70 3.68 3.69 3.75 3.74 3.75
05/15/2026 3.71 3.70 3.69 3.69 3.76 3.77 3.82
05/22/2026 3.72 3.69 3.69 3.68 3.78 3.79 3.86
05/29/2026 3.72 3.71 3.71 3.69 3.78 3.78 3.79

Date 2 Yr 3 Yr 5 Yr 7 Yr 10 Yr 20 Yr 30 Yr
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
05/08/2026 3.90 3.92 4.02 4.19 4.38 4.93 4.95
05/15/2026 4.09 4.14 4.26 4.43 4.59 5.14 5.12
05/22/2026 4.13 4.18 4.27 4.41 4.56 5.06 5.07
05/29/2026 3.98 4.06 4.13 4.27 4.45 4.98 4.99

Notes and bonds were bought last week, bringing down yields while spreads remained well within current ranges. 2s-10s widened slightly to +47. The 30-day-30-year full spectrum spread narrowed to +127. These reflect very manageable conditions for banking interests, though hardly of a nature suggesting rapid expansion of lending. Spreads remain a bit tight, though they are a vast improvement from the post-Covid era, 2021-23.

The next FOMC meeting being the first chaired by Kevin Warsh, June 16-17, will be supplied with enough employment, wage, and inflation data (CPI, PPI) to formulate a rational policy which would likely feature the beginning of a hiking expedition to tamp down the inflation genie, which has surely escaped from the bottle. Warsh is keenly aware of this and will suffer the president's displeasure if he so chooses to go the "Volker" route. President Trump would prefer he stand down and allow inflation to take off. The stock market gains and inflated figures across the government data sets make him look good.

Something is going to go snap unless Warsh does the right thing and ignores the politics, a tall order.

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
5/8: +48
5/15: +50
5/22: +43
5/29: +47

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
5/8: +124
5/15: +141
5/22: +135
5/29: +127

Oil/Gas

Thanks to the ongoing White House narrative of "nearing a deal" in the Iran conflict and no notable supply disruptions, WTI Crude Oil finished the week in New York at $87.76, down sharply from last Friday’s New York closing price of $97.00, which seems, on the surface, insanity, but is actually somewhat logical.

Nearly 25% of daily output is being cut off at the Strait of Hormuz and in the Indian Ocean. Oil prices on the global setting have risen from the 60s to the 90s, a gain of somewhere in the range of 33%. It's just makes sense to frame the disruption in this manner, as opposed to panic pricing in the $120-150 range. It's holding for now because traders do not want to get caught with too large a position either short or long as the futures market has been bounced around like a tennis ball at Wimbledon the past few months.

While the price of WTI crude has kept in a range from $90-$110 recently, this week's move below that level indicates that markets and traders are satisfied that any crisis has been averted and there's still enough - despite reports of dwindling stockpiles - to remain somewhat stable, for now. There is no certainty regarding a final outcome, so it's just simply day-trading, complete with wrinkles and nuances.

Average price for a gallon of unleaded regular gasoline in the U.S. was $4.50 last week and $4.29 this week, a significant change.

Somehow, the powers that be have managed to keep prices at the pump out of crisis range. Americans, having been through gas price hikes in the recent past, know how to adjust, and, with summer driving season dead ahead, expect more "close to home" vacations this year and maybe even some mention of the loathsome "stay-cations" which require no travel and no gas, spending that spare change on better eats and home-grown fun. Might not be so bad.

Prices in key states:

California (leader): $6.02 (-0.08)
Washington: $5.72 (-0.06)
Oklahoma (lowest): $3.77 (-0.20)
Mississippi: $3.84 (-0.11)
Florida: $4.03 (-0.34)
Illinois: $4.74 (+0.13)
Pennsylvania: $4.47 (-0.15)
New York: $4.50 (-0.07)
Maryland: $4.16 (-0.33)
Michigan: $4.26 (-0.28)
Texas: $4.77 (-0.25)
Georgia: $3.80 (-0.16)

On Sunday, May 24th, there are fourteen (14) states with average prices below $4.00, a large move from just five last week, with 34 above the $4 threshold, not including Hawaii ($5.63) and Alaska ($5.20), four above $5 (California, Nevada, Washington, Oregon), and one above $6 (California). The Southeast has become the lowest region overall over the past two weeks as a gallon of unleaded regular is averaging well below $4.00 in places like Tennessee, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Texas, and Mississippi.

Bitcoin

This week: $73,835.71
Last week: $76,800.00
2 weeks ago: $78,015.76
6 months ago: $85,807.97
One year ago: $104,494.50
Five years ago: $35,525.93

Look at those numbers. Bitcoin as an investment is just plain horrible. There seems to be no reason whatsoever to hold this vaporous "asset" (using the term very, very loosely in this instance) for any longer than it takes ot dispose of it.

Precious Metals

Gold:Silver Ratio: 60.30; last week: 59.73

Futures, per COMEX continuous contracts:

Gold price 5/1: $4,625.60
Gold price 5/8: $4,723.70
Gold price 5/15: $4,543.60
Gold price 5/22: $4,543.60
Gold price 5/29: $4,569.90

Silver price 5/1: $75.84
Silver price 5/8: $80.83
Silver price 5/15: $76.29
Silver price 5/22: $75.92
Silver price 5/29: $75.58

SPOT: (stockcharts.com)
Gold 5/1: $4,612.97
Gold 5/8: $4,714.90
Gold 5/15: $4,539.72
Gold 5/22: $4,508.74
Gold 5/29: $4,538.94

Silver 5/1: $75.34
Silver 5/8: $80.35
Silver 5/15: $75.94
Silver: 5/22: $75.48
Silver 5/29: $75.27

Gold and silver spent a third straight week rotating around a range of recent lows, gold at $4,500, with silver at $75, strangely suspicious prices suggesting these are key levels for derivative traders in futures markets wishing to contain prices of currencies alternative to the U.S. dollar.

While it is perfectly not all right to suppress competition, that's what the COMEX and LBMA does, and has done for the past 50-odd years, and there's little reason to believe they won't continue the practice, pretending that regional markets - with regional pricing mechanisms - in places like Shanghai, St. Petersburg, Dubai, and Singapore don't exist.

Those markets do indeed exist, though for casual buyers and stackers in the Western world, they are largely unreachable, and, for all practical purposes, useless. It would make little sense to transport small amounts of precious metals to markets in search of better prices unless those prices were significantly higher. A five dollar deviation in the price of silver or $100 in gold is not incentive enough to move physical metal.

Given that gold and silver have recently reached levels only dreamt about in years past, taking some profits at this point might not be such a bad idea, but only if one has sufficient metal in storage at the end of the day, a firm rationale for re-investment of any returns and a tax strategy. For those playing by the rules, such action would incur a high capital gains tax burden - a 28% hit in most cases - since gold and silver are treated as collectibles by the IRS.

That particular kind of IRS rule-making garbage is reason enough to hold onto gold and silver until either the IRS disappears or the U.S. government loses the ability to track and control money flows. Don't hold your breath waiting. Since gold and silver are thus encumbered by tyrannical government edicts, the obvious choice is to keep those assets close at hand and quietly pass them on to the next generation or use them as currency in surreptitious manners. Who knows, maybe your favorite plumber, electrician, gardener, or mechanic would like to add a little to his or her stack.

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: 75.00 100.00 87.03 86.00
1 oz silver bar: 75.00 122.01 91.23 81.92
1 oz gold coin: 4587.64 4887.05 4760.76 4760.05
1 oz gold bar: 4670.25 4785.40 4740.98 4739.95

The Single Ounce Silver Market Price Benchmark (SOSMPB) dipped modestly, to $86.55, a loss of 90 cents from the May 24 price of $87.45 per troy ounce, well within the recent range.

WEEKEND WRAP

Election politicking may actually be beneficial to the American people. With the Republicans in power, they have a vested interest in keeping inflation somewhat under control, so they're hell-bent on doing whatever it takes to keep inflation down until November. After that, most senators and house representatives will care less, likely much less. Whether they are able to thread the needle between high prices and a stalled economy is the big question. So far, they seem to be succeeding.

At the Close, Friday, May 29, 2026:
Dow: 51,032.46, +363.49 (+0.72%)
NASDAQ: 26,972.62, +55.15 (+0.20%)
S&P 500: 7,580.06, +16.43 (+0.22%)
NYSE Composite: 23,292.17, -10.10 (-0.04%)

For the Week:
Dow: +452.76 (+0.90%)
NASDAQ: +628.65 (+2.39%)
S&P 500: +106.59 (+1.43%)
NYSE Composite: +66.42 (+0.29%)
Dow Transports: +642.90 (+3.10%)



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 29, 2026

Dow, S&P, NASDAQ All Close at Record Highs Thursday; Buffett's Buy of Macy's Turning Heads; Dell Reports Blowout Quarter, Sends Stock Soaring

With just one more trading day in the week and the month, the advantage of owning equities appears unshakable.

For the week through Thursday's close, the Dow has added 80 points but is also at a record high. The NASDAQ is up 573 points (2.18%) in just three sessions, and the S&P 500 is ahead by 90 points (1.21%). All in all, index funds continue to look like the proverbial cat's meow, even with conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine and high inflation in the U.S.

As of Thursday's close the Shiller PE stands at 42.55, just more then 1.5 points from the all-time high of 44.19, set back in December 1999. Without taking into account the nuances of computing the Shiller PE (aka CAPE) and its 10-year earnings structure, the S&P would have to gain another 250-300 points to break the record, or, a record high close to 8,000 on the 500-stock index. Considering the degree to which stocks are currently in favor, that doesn't seem too far-fetched, despite the absolute bubbliest overview. A target of 8,000 on the S&P might be sometime between late July and early October, conveniently just in time for the midterms.

It was recently exposed that Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway had taken about a 1% stake in the quintessential retail chain, Macy's (M), which also owns Bloomingdales and an impressive real estate portfolio estimated at around $3 billion. Buffett may have made the call on this himself, which adds to the intrigue.

On the surface, the Macy's purchase seems to be a pretty shrewd move. The fact alone that Buffett sees value will draw in more investors, pushing the stock higher. Buffett will no doubt continue buying in measured fashion or possibly tender a buyout offer and take the company private under the Berkshire Hathaway umbrella. With the current market cap just above $5 billion, Buffett could offer $10 billion or more without batting an eyelash. He has a war chest of nearly $400 billion on hand, so it wouldn't be a significant move. Macy's could be sold out with a share price of $40 or higher. It's a pretty safe bet, plus, there's the annual dividend of 77 cents per share and a PE ratio kicking around 9 or 10.

Retail has been whipsawed in recent years due to trends toward e-commerce and the lackluster reputation of many regional malls. Macy's owns a load of properties and they're undergoing a major restructuring, closing many of under-performing stores while adding new initiates to those kept open. Retail hasn't been announced dead and buried. It may be just hibernating through a tech winter. People still like the idea of hands-on shopping, especially for apparel, an area in which Macy's excels. There's a lot to like in Buffett's bold move. He and his company haven’t invested in a retailer in about 60 years. The timing and strategy seem elegant with a tinge of contrarianism.

After the close on Thursday, these companies announced first quarter results:
Costco (COST) - small EPS miss, same-store sales up 6.6%, stock down less than 1% pre-market
AutoDesk (ADSK) - beats on revenue, EPS, investors not impressed, shares down 7%
Gap Inc. (GAP) - big EPS miss sends shares down 15%
Dell (DELL) - blows away estimates, stock up 35% pre-open

A little deeper look at Dell's outrageous rise this morning reveals record revenue of $43.8 billion, up 88% year over year, record diluted earnings per share (EPS) of $5.24, up 282% year over year, and record non-GAAP diluted EPS of $4.86, up 214%, record first-quarter cash flow from operations of $4.1 billion. The company benefitted from a close association with President Trump and this week, the company was awarded a $9.7 billion Pentagon contract to provide a suite of software to the U.S. military.

While Dell's results reek of insider activity and self-dealing, there's nothing fake about banking enormous profits. There is likely to be some pullback following the initial euphoria from this blowout quarter, though the stock could rampage higher, given current momentum. One-day gains such as this are truly astonishing and aligned entirely with Trump's vision of a growing U.S. tech base. Whatever comes of it, this will be the headline going into the weekend, suggesting massive gains to close out the week and the month.

As the opening bell approaches, futures ar higher, though uneven. Dow futures are up 115 points, S&P futures gaining 6-10 points, while the NASDAQ lags, up only 20 points after its big run-up Thursday.

With President Trump nixing the latest peace offering from Iran, once again on the nuclear issue, the rhetoric doesn't change from the hope and fear that's been narrated from the White House for the past month. The situation in the Middle East remains in doubt, seemingly suitable to institutional investors. Who knew that uncertainty would drive markets higher?

Gven the chokehold Iran and the U.S. have created over the flow of Persian Gulf oil, it's astonishing to see WTI futures ranging lower, around $87 per barrel prior to the opening bell. Meanwhile, executives at Chevron and ExxonMobil are warning about extremely low inventory levels. The U.S. strategic reverses are being drained, gas prices reamin stubbornly high (national average $4.37). Something has to give, or, maybe not. The stalemate could continue for months given the vagueness of the ongoing peace/war process.

None of this has helped precious metals, with both gold and silver trading near recent lows; gold around $4,500 and silver in the $75 range. Stocks are moving higher and treasury yields have dipped below 4.50% on the 10-year and 5.00% on 30-year bonds.

The weekend and June dead ahead, end-of-month window dressing is on the menu to close out a solid week on Wall Street.

At the Close, Thursday, May 28, 2026:
Dow: 50,668.97, +24.69 (+0.05%)
NASDAQ: 26,917.47, +242.74 (+0.91%)
S&P 500: 7,563.63, +43.27 (+0.58%)
NYSE Composite: 23,302.26, +35.20 (+0.15%)



Thursday, May 28, 2026

New Highs on Dow, S&P, NASDAQ; 1Q 2026 GDP Steady at 1.6%; Durable Goods Jump 7.9%; PCE Index Up 4.5%; Retailers Mostly Post Strong Earnings

Stocks made another move slightly higher on Wednesday. Against a backdrop of rising inflation and renewed attacks by the U.S. against Iranian targets in the Gulf of Hormuz, the Dow, S&P, and NASDAQ all closed at record highs.

The euphoria may be wearing a little bit thin as stock futures heading into Thursday's session were trending lower, though release of GDP and Capital Goods Orders sent futures higher after 8:30 am ET. Any losses in the indices are likely to be short-lived as the rally has not been negatively affected by either geo-politics or domestic data.

Thursday morning brings a handful of useful data, led by the monthly PCE Price Index, second estimate of first quarter GDP and Durable Goods orders. Labor gets numbers from the weekly jobless claims.

Real GDP was unchanged from the initial estimate of 1.6%, and, according to the BEA:

The price index for gross domestic purchases increased 3.5 percent in the first quarter, revised down 0.1 percentage point from the previous estimate. The personal consumption expenditures (PCE) price index increased 4.5 percent, the same as previously estimated, and the PCE price index excluding food and energy increased 4.4 percent, revised up 0.1 percentage point.

Durable Goods Orders were an out--of-the-park hit:

New orders for manufactured durable goods in April, up two consecutive months, increased $25.5 billion or 7.9 percent to $346.0 billion, the U.S. Census Bureau announced today. This followed a 1.3 percent March increase. Excluding transportation, new orders increased 1.1 percent. Excluding defense, new orders increased 8.1 percent. Transportation equipment, also up two consecutive months, led the increase, $23.1 billion or 21.5 percent to $130.9 billion.

Weekly initial and continuing unemployment claims were static, with the latest initial claims figure at 215,000, well within the current range.

First quarter earnings continue to trickle forward. After the close Wednesday, these companies reported:
Salesforce (CRM) - earnings beat, $3.88 adjusted vs. $3.12 expected, dull forecast, shares down less than 1%
HP (HPQ) - EPS beat, Dell merger dead, shares slip 2% pre-market
Marvell (MRVL) - earnings in-line, revenue up, forecast boldly positive, shares drop 3%

On Thursday, before the open,
Hormel Foods (HRL) - earnings beat, forecast confirmed, stock jumps 4-5% pre-open
Kohl's (KSS) - narrower than expected loss send shares soaring 18%
Best Buy (BBY) - Solid top and bottom line beats, shares up 9-10%
Burlington (BURL) - Meets expectations, forecast weak, stock down 10%
Dollar Tree (DLTR) - Strong 1Q translates into 18% gain pre-market

Wall Street, largely giddy over the morning's data drops and corporate earnings, continues to pile into stocks willy-nilly. a host of retail investors and skeptics continue moaning about high valuations, but the real money isn't holding back.

Heading toward Thursday’s open, futures have flattened out, gold and silver are lower, oil steady at around $90-91 and bitcoin continuing to drop, below $73,000 earlier this morning.

With institutions calling, "everybody into the pool; the water's fine," is this time, with stocks at record highs, the right time to take the leap? The right time was six months to a year or two ago, but retail is always the last to know and the last to move. When retail, always late to sense the obvious, does finally relent and join the party, then will be the correct time to take profits.

Until then, onward and upward.

At the Close, Wednesday, May 27, 2026:
Dow: 50,644.28, +182.60 (+0.36%)
NASDAQ: 26,674.73, +18.55 (+0.07%)
S&P 500: 7,520.36, +1.24 (+0.02%)
NYSE Composite: 23,267.07, -28.43 (-0.12%)



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Back-and-Forth With Iran Continues as NASDAQ, S&P Make Records; Oil Tumbles; Gold, Silver Lower; Dick's Down On Earnings Miss

After a long weekend of back-and-forth, peace or war rhetoric with Iran, the U.S. decided to take "defensive" action by bombing the port of Bandar Abbas in southern Iran, near the Straight of Hormuz around midnight Monday.

President Trump had already warned Iran that the alternative to accepting a peace plan would foment more destruction. The president also insisted upon the U.S. taking control of Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium, scuttling the hopeful deal that has been in negotiation for the better part of three weeks.

The heinous tactic of the U.S. - promise, promise, negotiate, escalate - has grown old. The U.S. citizenry has caught onto the rogue, barbaric teasing and attacking, calling the other side out for violations of the ceasefire and negotiating in bad faith. Somehow, the mainstream U.S. press continues to overlook the obvious.

Whether it be war of peace, Wall Street appears to be satisfied with either condition. While the Dow on Tuesday dropped back from its record high, the NASDAQ and S&P each ended the session at record closing levels. The Shiller PE rose to 42.32, continuing a ramp-up that has risen relentlessly since January of 2023.

Some first quarter company results were announced Wednesday morning prior to the open:
Abercrombie & Fitch (ANF) - EPS of 1.47 boost stock 7%
Bath & Body Works (BBWI) - Sales topped estimates, stock up 11% pre-market.
Dick's Sporting Goods (DKS) - Foot Locker acquisition turns positive, but company short on earnings, shares down 2%

After the close Wednesday, Salesforce (CRM), HP (HPQ), and Marvell (MRVL) report. On Thursday, before the open, Hormel Foods (HRL), Kohl's (KSS), Best Buy (BBY), and Burlington (BURL) highlight the earnings parade.

Stocks are looking for a positive start Wednesday morning. Dow futures are up 75 points; NASDAQ futures are adding 205; and S&P futures are up 19 a half hour before the bell. Precious metals are taking their usual mid-week beating with gold at $4,430 and silver at $74.36.

WTI crude oil had risen above $94 on Tuesday, but is currently leveling off just above $88.

Give peace a chance?

At the Close, Tuesday, May 26, 2026:
Dow: 50,461.68, -118.02 (-0.23%)
NASDAQ: 26,656.18, +312.21 (+1.19%)
S&P 500: 7,519.12, +45.65 (+0.61%)
NYSE Composite: 23,295.50, +69.75 (+0.30%)