President Trump declared the U.S.-Iran ceasefire 'over' from the NATO summit in Ankara, triggering the sharpest one-day oil rally in weeks and blowing a crater through rate-sensitive equities. WTI crude surged 4.4% to $73.52, the Dow shed 577 points, and the 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.57% — its highest level since mid-May. The Nasdaq managed to eke out a gain as chipmakers rebounded, but the message from Wednesday was clear: geopolitics is back in the driver's seat, and the Fed's hawkish June minutes just added fuel to the fire.
On Wednesday, President Trump told the NATO summit in Ankara that the U.S.-Iran ceasefire is "over," triggering a 4.4% spike in WTI crude to $73.52 and sending the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.57% — its highest since mid-May. The Dow fell 577 points and the S&P 500 dropped 0.28%, while the Nasdaq squeezed out a 0.2% gain on the back of a Broadcom surge (+4.8%) and a Nvidia rally (+1%) tied to Chinese H200 chip demand. The Fed poured gasoline on rate fears when minutes from its June meeting revealed some members actively considered a rate hike, pushing implied odds of a September increase to roughly 70%. On Thursday, markets partially recovered — tech led the Nasdaq higher by ~0.14%, semiconductors jumped ~4%, and oil pulled back — but PepsiCo's Q2 EPS miss ($2.20 vs. $2.21 estimate) and the broader macro backdrop kept the Dow under pressure. The takeaway: this market is now trading on two simultaneous risks — a Middle East escalation that could re-ignite inflation, and a Fed that may no longer be done hiking.
President Trump declared the U.S.-Iran ceasefire "over" at the NATO summit in Ankara, hours after U.S. forces conducted a "series of powerful strikes" against Iran in response to attacks on three commercial vessels in the Strait of Hormuz. WTI crude surged 4.37% to close at $73.52 per barrel — the biggest single-day move in weeks — while Brent jumped 5.4% to $78.19. Energy stocks led the market: ConocoPhillips gained 2.1% and Marathon Petroleum surged 5.4%. The Dow fell 576.76 points (−1.09%) to 52,348.39, with American Express off 3.8% and Boeing down 3%.
Minutes from the Fed's June FOMC meeting revealed that some policymakers made a case for a rate hike at that meeting, citing elevated core inflation and a robust labor market. The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to 4.57% — its highest level since mid-May. Implied probability of a September rate hike rose to approximately 70%, up from 58% the prior day. JPMorgan fell 2.5% and Visa dropped 1.3% as credit-sensitive names repriced the new rate outlook.
Chipmakers bucked the broader selloff on Wednesday and led Thursday's recovery. Broadcom gained 4.8% Wednesday after expanding its agreement with Apple on U.S.-made components. Nvidia rose 1% on reports that Chinese firms plan to increase purchases of H200 chips. On Thursday, Bloomberg reported a gauge of semiconductor firms climbed roughly 4% and the Nasdaq 100 added about 1%, as investors rotated back into AI infrastructure plays after two days of geopolitical-driven selling.
PepsiCo reported Q2 2026 results Thursday morning. Adjusted EPS came in at $2.20, missing the $2.21 consensus estimate by one cent. Revenue of $24.18 billion topped the $23.95 billion target, rising 6.4% year over year — boosted by strong international performance. Organic revenue grew 2.4%. Shares fell roughly 1.7% to around $140 as investors focused on the slight EPS miss and ongoing weakness in North American food volumes.
The Strait of Hormuz has been the world's most consequential chokepoint for months. Roughly 25% of global seaborne oil trade once passed through that 24-mile-wide passage daily. Even a partial disruption rewires global energy prices — and energy prices are exactly what the Fed is watching. When Trump declared the ceasefire "over," traders didn't just react to the oil spike. They recalibrated the entire rate path.
That recalibration got a second jolt from the FOMC minutes. The June meeting ended with the Fed holding steady — but the minutes showed some members thought the data warranted a hike. For a market that had spent the first half of 2026 pricing in rate cuts by year-end, this is a material shift. The implied probability of a September rate hike jumped to around 70% in a single session. Credit-sensitive sectors — financials, real estate, industrials — bore the brunt of that repricing.
The split between the Dow and the Nasdaq is the clearest signal of what's happening. The Dow is packed with rate-sensitive multinationals and consumer names; the Nasdaq is tech-heavy and increasingly dominated by AI-infrastructure companies with long-duration earnings that are paradoxically less sensitive to near-term rate moves in the current AI capex supercycle. Broadcom and Nvidia are printing gains while JPMorgan and Visa are bleeding. That's not a contradiction — it's a market sorting winners from losers in a stagflationary-adjacent environment.
The 10-year yield at 4.57% is a five-week high and climbing. Fed minutes confirmed a hawkish undercurrent that markets had been ignoring. If oil stays elevated, core goods inflation could re-accelerate — forcing the Fed's hand on a September hike that most investors weren't pricing two weeks ago. Watch the 30-year, which briefly traded above 5%.
The Dow-Nasdaq divergence captures the split market perfectly. Energy names and AI infrastructure plays are winning; rate-sensitive financials, industrials, and consumer staples are losing. Duration matters: long-runway AI capex stories are less sensitive to near-term rate moves than cyclical earners. PepsiCo's slight EPS miss is a reminder that consumer pricing power has limits.
Higher oil prices are a tax on consumption. The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow indicator for Q2 had already fallen to just 1.4% — well below the 4%+ readings from earlier in 2026. Sustained crude above $75 could shave another 20–30 basis points off GDP estimates and further squeeze margins for energy-intensive manufacturers and logistics companies.
Three events will set the trajectory for the rest of July: (1) Any diplomatic signal from the Strait of Hormuz — a ceasefire restoration collapses the oil spike; (2) June CPI on July 14 — above 3% is the danger zone for rate expectations; (3) Q2 earnings season starting with JPMorgan on July 14 — bank NIM expansion vs. credit quality deterioration.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh testifies before Congress on July 14 — the same day as June CPI. A hawkish reading of inflation paired with hawkish testimony could push September rate-hike odds above 80% and reprice the entire Treasury curve. Mark your calendar.
The Energy Select Sector SPDR (XLE) surged 2.8% on Wednesday as WTI crude's 4.4% spike lifted every upstream and midstream name. ConocoPhillips (+2.1%), Marathon Petroleum (+5.4%), Diamondback Energy, Occidental Petroleum, and Valero all led gains. Energy is the obvious trade when geopolitical risk re-enters the oil market — and right now, geopolitical risk is the market.
The Industrials Select Sector SPDR (XLI) fell 1.7% Wednesday — battered by rising input costs from oil, higher yields pressuring capex-heavy companies, and broad risk-off sentiment. Boeing fell 3%, GE Vernova sank roughly 3%. The sector sits at the intersection of everything going wrong: it needs cheap energy, cheap credit, and global trade stability — and all three are deteriorating simultaneously.
The information technology sector (XLK) fell 2.4% Wednesday as the broad AI hyperscaler trade — Alphabet (−1.4%), Amazon (−1%), Microsoft (−1.4%) — retreated on data center spending anxiety. But chipmakers staged a powerful reversal: Broadcom (+4.8%), Nvidia (+1%), and Thursday's semiconductor gauge rising ~4%. The sector is bifurcating between infrastructure enablers and end-application players. Know which side of that trade you're analyzing.
This week is a live tutorial in how a single geopolitical event — a presidential statement at a NATO summit — can reprice oil, yields, equities, and rate expectations within hours. Understanding the transmission mechanism from news to markets is the baseline expectation in any finance interview right now.
Client calls this week will revolve around two questions: "Should I be in energy?" and "Are my bonds safe?" The answer to both requires you to explain the oil–inflation–rates feedback loop clearly. Energy ETFs (XLE) are having a moment, but chasing a geopolitical premium is different from owning structural energy exposure. Help clients distinguish between tactical tilts and strategic allocations. Rising yields also mean existing bond portfolios have unrealized losses — know how to frame duration risk in plain language.
The sector bifurcation this week is your model-updating moment. Every energy name needs a revised oil price deck — $73.52 WTI is not the same as $68. Every industrial name needs a revised margin assumption if fuel and freight costs re-accelerate. And every bank model needs a September rate hike scenario run. The analysts who move fastest and most accurately on macro scenario updates build reputations in volatile markets. Don't wait for consensus to catch up.
Two deal dynamics shift when rates spike and geopolitics flare: (1) M&A financing gets more expensive — leveraged buyout models that assumed 4.2% yields now need to be re-run at 4.6%+, which cuts into IRR projections; (2) Energy sector M&A often heats up when oil prices spike, as majors look to consolidate acreage and lock in reserves at elevated valuations. Watch for consolidation chatter in E&P and midstream. The upcoming JPMorgan earnings (July 14) will signal whether deal pipelines are holding up under the rate pressure.
Cost-push inflation occurs when rising input costs — particularly energy — force producers to raise prices across the economy, pushing the overall price level higher regardless of demand conditions. It's distinct from demand-pull inflation, where excess consumer spending drives prices up. This week's oil spike is textbook cost-push: a geopolitical shock tightens oil supply, raising fuel, transport, and manufacturing costs, which flow through to consumer prices over weeks and months. The Fed finds cost-push inflation particularly difficult to manage because raising rates doesn't fix a supply disruption — it just slows demand to compensate, often at the cost of growth. That's why FOMC minutes flagging rate-hike risk in the middle of an oil shock is a double negative for markets: higher rates AND a supply-side inflation problem, with no clean policy lever to fix both simultaneously.
"What's interesting about this week is that the market is simultaneously pricing two different kinds of inflation risk — cost-push from the oil spike and demand-side stickiness flagged in the FOMC minutes. Those require different policy responses, and the Fed can really only address one at a time. The 10-year yield hitting 4.57% tells you the bond market thinks rates stay higher for longer regardless, which is why you're seeing that sharp bifurcation: energy names and AI chip plays outperforming while everything rate-sensitive — banks, industrials, REITs — takes a real hit."