MORNING BRIEF

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

☀️ A sea turtle that hatched in 1962 is still swimming somewhere in the Pacific, living its best life without checking a single market chart. Today, you're already ahead of that turtle.

Markets Snapshot

April 14, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close

Stocks rallied sharply Tuesday as Iran peace talks resumed, easing oil shock fears and lifting energy-sensitive sectors. The S&P 500 gained 1.18% to near all-time highs, with mega-cap tech leading (+1.96% Nasdaq) on AI infrastructure optimism. Oil prices collapsed 8% on ceasefire hopes, reducing stagflation concerns and allowing yields to compress lower despite sticky 3.3% headline CPI. The dollar weakened to six-week lows as safe-haven demand evaporated, while crypto surged on risk-on sentiment.
Why It Matters: Markets are pricing a dramatic shift from geopolitical risk-off to diplomatic resolution. The 50-basis-point 2s/10s spread signals growth expectations are stabilizing after weeks of inversion fears. Oil's sharp pullback from $112 to $91 removes the primary inflation wildcard, giving the Fed breathing room to hold rates steady through mid-year. The simultaneous rally in equities, crypto, and commodities (except oil) reflects a return to risk-on positioning, but the VIX at 18 remains elevated—suggesting traders aren't fully convinced the Middle East crisis is resolved.
📖 Finance Deep Dive: Today's cross-asset moves reveal a classic risk-off-to-risk-on rotation. When oil prices fall sharply, inflation expectations decline, which reduces the real yield (nominal yield minus inflation expectations) on Treasuries. Lower real yields make equities more attractive on a relative basis—the equity risk premium (the extra return stocks offer over bonds) expands when bonds become less competitive. This is why the 10Y fell 4 basis points despite strong economic data: the market repriced inflation risk downward, not growth risk. The dollar's weakness reflects the same dynamic: lower US real yields reduce the carry trade advantage of holding dollars, so capital rotates into risk assets (stocks, crypto, commodities). The 2s/10s spread compressing to 50 bps (from 74 bps in early February) shows the curve is normalizing—short rates are sticky at 3.77% because the Fed is on hold, but long rates are falling as inflation fears ease. This is the opposite of inversion, and it's bullish for equities because it signals the market no longer expects a recession. Broadcom's 3% pop on the Meta deal exemplifies how AI capex is now the marginal driver of semiconductor valuations—not macro cycles, but the structural shift toward data center buildout.
BROADCOM — Broadcom Inc.
$218.50 +3.0% Biggest S&P 500 Mover

Broadcom surged after Meta announced a major partnership to deploy 1 gigawatt of custom AI chips using Broadcom's technology through 2029. The deal extends their existing relationship and signals accelerating AI infrastructure spending by hyperscalers. Broadcom CEO Hock Tan is transitioning from Meta's board to an advisor role, cementing the strategic alignment as AI capex becomes the dominant driver of semiconductor demand.

Equities

S&P 500
6,967.38
1d: 🟢 +1.18%   YTD: 🟢 +12.3%
NASDAQ
23,639.08
1d: 🟢 +1.96%   YTD: 🟢 +14.8%
Dow
48,535.99
1d: 🟢 +0.66%   YTD: 🟢 +10.2%
Russell 2000
2,705.67
1d: 🟢 +1.32%   YTD: 🟢 +8.5%
Mag 7
63.61
1d: 🟢 +2.99%   YTD: 🟢 +16.4%
Nikkei 225
58,394.26
1d: 🟢 +0.89%   YTD: 🟢 +18.2%
Euro Stoxx 50
5,966.97
1d: 🔴 (0.29%)   YTD: 🟢 +9.1%
MSCI EAFE
2,847.50
1d: 🟢 +0.42%   YTD: 🟢 +7.8%
MSCI EM
1,156.30
1d: 🟢 +0.58%   YTD: 🟢 +6.2%

Rates & Yield Curve

2Y Treasury
3.77%
1d: 🔴 (0.02%)   YTD: 🔴 (0.18%)
10Y Treasury
4.27%
1d: 🔴 (0.04%)   YTD: 🔴 (0.22%)
30Y Treasury
4.91%
1d: 🔴 (0.06%)   YTD: 🔴 (0.31%)
2s/10s Spread
50 bps
1d: 🔴 (2 bps)   YTD: 🔴 (4 bps)
30Y Mortgage Rate
6.37%
1d: 🔴 (0.08%)   YTD: 🔴 (0.42%)

FX & Volatility

DXY
98.09
1d: 🔴 (0.04%)   YTD: 🔴 (1.30%)
VIX
18.36
1d: 🔴 (3.97%)   YTD: 🔴 (28.5%)

Commodities

Gold
4,827.30
1d: 🟢 +1.26%   YTD: 🟢 +8.4%
WTI Crude
91.28
1d: 🔴 (7.98%)   YTD: 🟢 +47.2%
Brent Crude
94.79
1d: 🔴 (4.60%)   YTD: 🟢 +47.01%
Natural Gas
2.84
1d: 🟢 +3.21%   YTD: 🟢 +12.8%
Copper
4.12
1d: 🟢 +0.98%   YTD: 🟢 +9.3%

Crypto

BTC
74,827.91
1d: 🟢 +3.95%   YTD: 🟢 +42.3%
ETH
2,377.00
1d: 🟢 +8.60%   YTD: 🟢 +38.7%
SOL
89.45
1d: 🟢 +6.30%   YTD: 🟢 +31.2%
Economic Backdrop Fed Funds: 3.50–3.75%CPI: 3.3% YoY (March 2026)Unemployment: 3.9% (March 2026)Next FOMC: April 28–29 — 95% probability of hold
Prediction Markets
Will the Fed cut rates by June 30, 2026? 18% CME FedWatch
Will Bitcoin reach $100K by December 31, 2026? 51% Polymarket
Will S&P 500 hit 7,500 by year-end 2026? 38% Polymarket
Will US inflation fall below 2.5% by June 2026? 22% Kalshi
Will Iran-US ceasefire hold through May 2026? 64% Polymarket
94

US-Iran Ceasefire Holds as Trump Signals Diplomatic Path Forward

  • President Trump said the Iran conflict is 'very close to over' and indicated peace talks could resume within days.
  • The diplomatic optimism has triggered a sharp reversal in oil prices and risk-off positioning, lifting equities and crypto.

President Trump told the New York Post Tuesday that the US-Iran conflict is 'very close to over' and signaled that direct peace talks could resume within the next two days. Both countries are reportedly considering another round of negotiations before the current two-week ceasefire expires on April 22. The diplomatic optimism has triggered a sharp reversal in market positioning: oil prices collapsed 8% on Tuesday, the dollar weakened to six-week lows, and equities rallied to near all-time highs. The Strait of Hormuz blockade, which initially spooked markets over the weekend, turned out to be narrower than feared, easing supply disruption concerns. If talks succeed, oil could fall further, removing the primary inflation wildcard and allowing the Fed to maintain its patient stance on rate cuts.

78

Producer Prices Rise Less Than Expected in March, Easing Inflation Concerns

  • The Producer Price Index (PPI) rose 0.5% in March, well below the 1.0% consensus estimate, suggesting inflation pressures are moderating.
  • The softer-than-expected reading supports the Fed's patient stance and reduces stagflation fears.

The Producer Price Index (PPI), which measures wholesale inflation, rose 0.5% in March, significantly below the 1.0% consensus estimate. The softer reading suggests that despite the oil shock, businesses are not yet passing higher costs to consumers at the wholesale level. This is a critical data point because it indicates inflation may not be as sticky as feared. The monthly figure was driven primarily by energy, but core PPI (excluding food and energy) remained subdued, suggesting underlying demand pressures are contained. For the Fed, this reinforces the case for patience on rate cuts—inflation is elevated but not accelerating as rapidly as the oil shock might suggest.

72

Dollar Index Falls to Six-Week Lows as Risk Appetite Returns

  • The US Dollar Index (DXY) fell to 98.09, its lowest level since late February before the Iran conflict began.
  • The weakness reflects a shift from safe-haven demand to risk-on positioning as geopolitical tensions ease.

The US Dollar Index fell to 98.09 on Tuesday, marking its seventh consecutive session of losses and reaching its lowest level since late February. The dollar's weakness reflects the classic risk-off-to-risk-on rotation: when geopolitical risk declines, investors rotate out of safe-haven assets (the dollar, Treasuries) and into risk assets (equities, commodities, crypto). The dollar's decline is also supported by lower US real yields—as inflation expectations fall on oil's pullback, the real yield on Treasuries declines, making dollar-denominated assets less attractive relative to foreign assets. Over the past month, the dollar has weakened 1.63%, nearly erasing all gains made during the Iran conflict.

68

Magnificent 7 Rally Continues as AI Capex Cycle Accelerates

  • The Magnificent 7 (Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Tesla) gained 2.99% Tuesday, outpacing the broader S&P 500.
  • The rally reflects sustained institutional demand for mega-cap tech stocks as AI infrastructure spending accelerates.

The Magnificent 7 index gained 2.99% Tuesday, with Nvidia leading the charge on the Broadcom-Meta deal and sustained AI capex optimism. The seven mega-cap tech stocks now account for 36% of the S&P 500's total market value, up from 23% in 2000. Nvidia alone represents 7.0% of the index weight—larger than entire sectors like energy or utilities. This concentration reflects the market's conviction that AI is the dominant structural growth driver for the next decade. However, it also creates concentration risk: if sentiment shifts, the entire market could face significant drawdowns. For now, the rally is supported by earnings growth and capex visibility, but valuations are stretched at 21.4x forward P/E.

Top Story

Meta and Broadcom Extend AI Chip Partnership Through 2029, Signaling Hyperscaler Capex Acceleration

Meta Platforms announced Tuesday it has agreed to deploy 1 gigawatt of custom artificial intelligence chips using Broadcom's technology, extending an existing partnership through 2029. The two companies will collaborate on multiple generations of Meta's custom in-house AI accelerators, with Broadcom CEO Hock Tan transitioning from Meta's board to an advisor role. This deal matters because it crystallizes a structural trend: hyperscalers (Meta, Google, Amazon, Microsoft) are moving away from relying solely on Nvidia GPUs and building proprietary silicon to reduce costs and lock in performance gains. The 1-gigawatt commitment is enormous—equivalent to powering a small city—and signals Meta's confidence in sustained AI infrastructure spending. For Broadcom, it guarantees a multi-year revenue stream from custom chip design and manufacturing. For the broader market, it validates the thesis that AI capex will remain elevated through 2026-2027, supporting semiconductor demand even if macro growth slows.

💡 Gigawatt (GW) — a unit of power equal to 1 billion watts. In data center terms, 1 GW represents the electrical capacity needed to power roughly 750,000 homes, illustrating the scale of Meta's AI infrastructure buildout.

Tech & AI

ASML Posts Strong Q1 Earnings on Surging AI Chip Demand

  • Dutch chipmaker ASML reported robust first-quarter results driven by intense demand for photolithography equipment used in AI chip production.
  • The company's guidance suggests sustained capex cycles from semiconductor manufacturers racing to build AI capacity.

ASML Holding, the world's leading supplier of photolithography machines, posted strong Q1 earnings Wednesday, with results driven by surging demand from chip manufacturers building AI infrastructure. The company's equipment is essential for producing advanced semiconductors, and the backlog reflects the intensity of the global AI arms race. ASML's guidance signals confidence in sustained capex spending through 2026, which supports the broader semiconductor ecosystem. This is a leading indicator for the entire chip supply chain—when ASML's order book is full, it means Nvidia, AMD, and other chipmakers are investing heavily in production capacity.

💡 Photolithography — the process of using light to etch circuit patterns onto silicon wafers. ASML's extreme ultraviolet (EUV) machines are the most advanced and expensive tools in semiconductor manufacturing, costing $150M+ per unit.

eToro Acquires Crypto Wallet Zengo for $70M, Expanding Retail Crypto Infrastructure

  • Retail trading platform eToro is acquiring advanced crypto wallet Zengo for $70 million to deepen its crypto offerings.
  • The deal reflects growing institutional and retail demand for integrated crypto trading and custody solutions.

eToro announced the acquisition of Zengo, an advanced crypto wallet provider, for $70 million. Zengo specializes in self-custody wallets with advanced security features designed to protect users' assets. The acquisition allows eToro to integrate wallet functionality directly into its platform, reducing friction for retail crypto traders and investors. This signals the maturation of the crypto infrastructure layer—platforms are consolidating custody, trading, and wallet services to compete with traditional brokers. For the crypto ecosystem, it validates the thesis that self-custody and user control are becoming table stakes for mainstream adoption.

💡 Self-custody — holding your own private keys to crypto assets, rather than trusting a centralized exchange to hold them for you. It offers security but requires users to manage their own backups and recovery phrases.

SpaceX Targets $1.75T IPO Valuation, Would Rank Among World's Largest Companies

  • SpaceX is preparing for an IPO at a targeted valuation of $1.75 trillion, which would make it one of the world's largest public companies.
  • The valuation reflects investor appetite for space infrastructure and Starlink's potential as a global broadband provider.

SpaceX is targeting a $1.75 trillion valuation for its upcoming initial public offering, according to recent filings. At that valuation, SpaceX would rank among the world's seven largest public companies by market cap—larger than JPMorgan, Eli Lilly, and Saudi Aramco's 2019 IPO. The valuation reflects the market's confidence in Starlink, SpaceX's satellite broadband network, which is expanding globally and generating recurring revenue. If the IPO prices near the target, it would be the largest IPO by valuation in history. For investors, it represents a bet on space infrastructure becoming a critical utility, similar to telecommunications and energy.

💡 Starlink — SpaceX's satellite internet constellation providing global broadband coverage. Unlike traditional terrestrial networks, Starlink uses low-earth-orbit satellites to deliver internet to remote areas with minimal latency.

Crypto & Web3

Bitcoin Breaks $75K on Iran Peace Talks, Ethereum Outperforms with 8.6% Gain

  • Bitcoin surged past $75,000 for the first time since mid-March as Iran signaled willingness to resume peace negotiations.
  • Ethereum rallied 8.6% to $2,377, outperforming Bitcoin for the first time in months on network growth and institutional adoption signals.

Bitcoin broke above $75,000 Tuesday after Iran signaled it wants to resume peace talks with the United States, easing geopolitical risk premiums that had capped crypto prices for weeks. Ethereum outperformed with an 8.6% jump to $2,377, driven by on-chain activity surging 41% and growing institutional interest in Ethereum as the backbone for tokenized real-world assets. Solana rose 6.3% to $89.45 on strong DeFi volume ($57B in March), while XRP climbed to $1.38 on optimism around the CLARITY Act, which would make XRP's digital commodity status permanent federal law. The rally faces three near-term tests: the April 15 tax deadline (estimated $2.8B in crypto selling), the ceasefire expiry on April 22, and the FOMC meeting on April 28-29. If Ethereum holds above $2,300 and ETF flows stay positive, it could rally toward $2,600-$2,800 over coming weeks.

💡 Spot ETF inflows — when investors buy shares of a Bitcoin or Ethereum ETF, the fund manager must purchase actual crypto to back those shares. Large inflows create a structural bid for the underlying asset, supporting prices.

Stablecoin Supply Hits Record $180B as Institutional Adoption Accelerates

  • Total stablecoin supply reached $180 billion in Q1 2026, a new all-time high, signaling growing institutional use of crypto for payments and settlement.
  • The growth reflects both retail demand and enterprise adoption of blockchain-based settlement infrastructure.

Stablecoin supply reached a record $180 billion in Q1 2026, up from $165B at year-end 2025, according to on-chain data. The surge reflects dual drivers: retail demand for crypto trading pairs (stablecoins are the primary trading pair against Bitcoin and Ethereum) and institutional adoption of blockchain-based settlement. Major financial institutions are increasingly using stablecoins for cross-border payments and treasury management, reducing reliance on traditional correspondent banking. The growth validates the thesis that stablecoins are becoming critical infrastructure for the crypto ecosystem, similar to how the US dollar is the reserve currency for global trade. For crypto markets, higher stablecoin supply typically precedes rallies, as it represents dry powder ready to deploy into risk assets.

💡 Stablecoin — a cryptocurrency designed to maintain a stable value, typically pegged 1:1 to the US dollar or another fiat currency. Examples include USDC, USDT, and DAI.

What's Ahead

Wednesday, April 15: Bank Earnings: Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, PNC Financial Services report Q1 results — Major bank earnings will reveal the impact of higher rates on net interest margins and credit quality. Investors will watch for guidance on loan growth and deposit trends amid the Iran conflict and potential economic slowdown.
Thursday, April 16: Retail Sales (March) and Empire State Manufacturing Index (April) — Retail sales data will show consumer spending resilience after the oil shock. The Empire State index measures manufacturing sentiment in the New York region, a leading indicator for industrial activity.
Friday, April 17: Initial Jobless Claims (weekly) and Industrial Production (March) — Weekly jobless claims will track labor market health as cracks widen in employment. Industrial production data will reveal whether manufacturers are pulling back on capex amid geopolitical uncertainty.

Something Fascinating

Scientists Discover Octopuses Can Taste With Their Arms, Rewriting Understanding of Sensory Biology

Marine biologists at UC Berkeley discovered that octopuses possess chemoreceptors (taste receptors) distributed across their eight arms, allowing them to taste food directly through their limbs before consuming it. This sensory capability is fundamentally different from how humans and most animals taste—we rely on taste buds concentrated in the mouth and tongue. The octopus's distributed sensory system means each arm can independently evaluate food quality and texture, giving the animal an evolutionary advantage in murky ocean environments where vision is limited. This discovery has profound implications for neuroscience: it suggests that intelligence and sensory processing don't require centralized brains, and that distributed neural networks (like the octopus's 500 million neurons spread across its arms) can solve complex problems. For AI researchers, the octopus brain offers a biological blueprint for decentralized computing systems that might be more efficient and resilient than centralized architectures.

💡 Chemoreceptors — sensory cells that detect chemical compounds and transmit signals to the nervous system. In humans, taste buds contain chemoreceptors; in octopuses, they're distributed across the arms.

Morning Brief — Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Built by Phil Dressler

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