Oil Retreat Fuels Broadening Rally

The stock market navigated another eventful week, with inflation data, semiconductor volatility, geopolitical developments, and the highly anticipated SpaceX IPO all competing for investors' attention. By week's end, however, easing oil prices and improving market breadth helped the major averages secure modest gains, with the S&P 500 (+0.7%), Nasdaq Composite (+0.7%), and DJIA (+0.7%) all finishing higher.

One of the week's most notable developments was the market's reaction to inflation data. While both CPI and PPI contained some mildly encouraging elements, neither report materially altered expectations that the Federal Reserve will remain patient on rate cuts. Overall, inflation still remains elevated, reinforcing the view that progress toward the Fed's 2% target remains slow and uneven. Treasury yields ultimately finished the week lower, though investors were left with little reason to expect a significant shift in monetary policy anytime soon.

Technology stocks remained at the center of the action, though leadership within the sector was anything but smooth. Semiconductor stocks experienced multiple sharp reversals throughout the week, highlighted by abrupt selloffs on Tuesday and Wednesday that were followed by equally powerful rebounds later in the week. The sector's resilience contrasted with continued weakness in software stocks.

The week's most anticipated corporate event arrived Friday with SpaceX's public debut. The offering priced at $135 per share before opening at $150 and finishing its first session roughly 19% above the IPO price. While some market participants suggested the offering contributed to volatility across mega-cap technology stocks as investors repositioned portfolios and raised cash ahead of the debut, the successful launch ultimately served as another reminder of the strong appetite for growth-oriented and technology-related investments.

Geopolitical developments also played a major role throughout the week. Markets spent much of the first half of the week reacting to developments surrounding U.S.-Iran negotiations and periodic military escalations, which repeatedly influenced oil prices and investor sentiment. Ultimately, optimism surrounding a potential agreement between the two countries helped crude oil prices tumble roughly 7% for the week. That decline became a powerful tailwind for equities, supporting airlines, homebuilders, cruise operators, financials, materials, and other economically sensitive areas of the market. While the energy sector finished slightly lower for the week, falling oil prices helped ease inflation concerns and provided a supportive backdrop for risk assets more broadly.

Perhaps the most encouraging development for bulls was the continued broadening beneath the surface. While mega-cap growth stocks and technology names experienced bouts of volatility, leadership increasingly expanded into other areas of the market. The Russell 2000 (+3.9%) and S&P Mid Cap 400 (+2.8%) comfortably outpaced the major averages, while financials, materials, consumer staples, and real estate all posted solid gains. The improvement in participation suggests investors are becoming more willing to look beyond a handful of mega-cap technology stocks, even as AI-related themes continue to command significant attention.

In the end, the week served as a reminder that markets remain highly sensitive to both inflation and geopolitical developments. Yet despite choppy trading across many of the market's largest stocks, investors consistently bought dips in semiconductors, embraced the SpaceX debut, and rotated into a broader range of sectors. Combined with falling oil prices and declining volatility, that resilience was enough to keep the major averages in positive territory and leave the broader market on relatively solid footing heading into next week.

  • Russell 2000: +3.9% week-to-date

  • S&P Mid Cap 400: +2.8% week-to-date

  • Nasdaq Composite: +0.7% week-to-date

  • DJIA: +0.7% week-to-date

  • S&P 500: +0.7% week-to-date