Wall Street is officially caught in a tug-of-war between geopolitical chaos and semiconductor supremacy. U.S. equities closed out a mixed week as traders aggressively de-risked their portfolios ahead of a long weekend, fearing what might happen with Middle East negotiations while the markets are closed.
💰 THE METRICS (The Mixed Market):
- The Scorecard: The Dow dropped 0.56% and the S&P 500 slipped 0.11%, but the tech-heavy Nasdaq defied gravity, closing up 0.35%.
- The Inflation Shock: The CPI just logged its largest monthly jump in nearly four years. This was entirely driven by the war, which triggered a massive 21.2% surge at the gasoline pump.
- The Earnings Buffer: With Q1 earnings season unofficially kicking off next week, analysts are currently predicting a solid 13.9% aggregate year-on-year earnings growth for the S&P 500, hoping corporate fundamentals can distract from the macro noise.
🌍 THE MACRO CATALYST (Geopolitics vs. Big Tech):
- The Strait of Hormuz Stand-Off: The market is paralyzed by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz by Iran. Traders are refusing to hold long exposure over a 2.5-day weekend while Washington and Tehran negotiate, leading to a distinct pattern of late-week selling.
- The Sentiment Crash: The energy shock is hitting Main Street brutally fast. U.S. consumer sentiment just plunged to a record low, and the San Francisco Fed is already warning that this oil shock will delay the return to the 2% inflation target.
- The Silicon Safe Haven: Despite the macro doom, the AI trade refuses to break. Semiconductors acted as the ultimate shock absorber, driving the Nasdaq higher with Broadcom (+4.7%), Nvidia (+2.6%), and CoreWeave (+10.9% on an Anthropic deal) posting massive gains.
💡 THE BOTTOM LINE: We are looking at a deeply bifurcated economy. On one hand, a geopolitical oil shock is actively reigniting inflation, crushing consumer sentiment, and threatening the Fed’s timeline. On the other hand, the AI hardware boom is so structurally resilient that it is single-handedly keeping the broader indices afloat. Next week’s Q1 bank earnings will be the ultimate acid test to see if corporate profits can actually outrun geopolitical inflation.
