Saturday, May 23, 2026
☀️ Somewhere in the ocean right now, a sea turtle that hatched in 1962 is still just vibing, unbothered and thriving. Channel that energy today.
May 22, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Dell surged Friday after analyst price target increases ahead of its Q1 fiscal 2027 earnings report due May 28, driven by renewed optimism around AI infrastructure buildout and data center demand. The chipmaker benefited as investors repositioned into semiconductor and infrastructure plays following Treasury yield stabilization, signaling confidence that the AI capex cycle remains intact despite macro headwinds.
The US Treasury yield curve flattened sharply Friday as the 10Y Treasury fell 2.6 basis points to 4.558% while the 2Y held steady at 4.42%, compressing the 2s/10s spread to just 13.8 basis points. The flattening reflects a critical market signal: bond investors are betting the Fed will eventually cut rates, even though Fed officials have signaled no cuts are coming in 2026. A flat curve historically precedes recessions because it signals that short-term rates are as high or higher than long-term rates, which is economically perverse, but the current flattening is driven by long-end yields falling (not short-end rising), which is more benign and suggests bond markets are repricing growth expectations downward rather than signaling an imminent inversion.
Energy stocks rallied Friday as crude oil stabilized and investors grew more confident that US-Iran negotiations would eventually yield a deal, with WTI crude closing at $98.15 (+0.71%), down 3% for the week but still 50% above pre-war levels. The XLE energy ETF gained 1.2%, outperforming the broader market, as investors rotated into cyclicals on the assumption that geopolitical risk is peaking, though the rally is fragile because if Iran's uranium directive signals a breakdown in talks, oil could spike back to $110+ in hours. The structural backdrop remains bullish for energy: global oil demand is strong, OPEC+ is maintaining production cuts, and the US Strategic Petroleum Reserve is at 20-year lows after record releases last week.
Japan's Nikkei 225 surged 2.68% Friday to 63,339, its best day in weeks, driven by a rally in SoftBank and other tech/energy names, with SoftBank's 12% jump on OpenAI and SB Energy IPO reports as the primary catalyst. The broader move reflects a structural shift: Japanese investors are increasingly viewing their domestic tech and energy stocks as plays on global AI infrastructure and renewable energy buildout, with other gainers including Kioxia Holdings (+3.7%), Fujikura (+7.8%), and Ibiden Co (+7.7%), all semiconductor or materials suppliers to the AI chip ecosystem. The Nikkei's outperformance versus the S&P 500 (which rose only 0.37%) suggests that international investors are rotating into Japan as a cheaper, less crowded way to gain AI exposure, especially with the yen remaining weak (USD/JPY ~155), which makes Japanese exports more competitive and boosts earnings for exporters.
Iran's Supreme Leader issued a directive Friday that the country's enriched uranium reserves must remain inside Iran, directly contradicting a central US demand in ongoing peace negotiations and signaling Tehran is hardening its position even as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said there were encouraging signs of a potential agreement. The geopolitical tug-of-war reflects deeper structural tensions: the US wants Iran to dismantle its nuclear program as a condition for lifting sanctions, while Iran views its uranium stockpile as leverage and a deterrent. Oil markets are caught in the crossfire—WTI crude closed Friday at $98.15, still down 3% for the week but holding 50% above pre-war levels—because if negotiations collapse and the Strait of Hormuz closes, global oil supply could lose 20-30% of daily throughput, sending prices to $150+ per barrel and triggering a stagflationary shock across developed markets.
💡 Enriched uranium — uranium processed to higher concentrations of U-235, the isotope needed for nuclear weapons. Iran's stockpile is near weapons-grade (60%+ enrichment), which the US views as an existential threat.
SoftBank Group surged 11.23% Friday on reports that OpenAI and SB Energy (SoftBank's renewable energy subsidiary) are preparing for US initial public offerings, with OpenAI potentially valued at $80B+ and SB Energy capitalizing on surging demand for data center power. The move extends SoftBank's week-long rally and reflects the market's conviction that AI infrastructure and energy are the two most valuable secular themes in 2026. For SoftBank, the IPOs unlock value in portfolio companies that have been trapped on the balance sheet, allowing the conglomerate to redeploy capital into new bets while mega-cap tech companies race to secure power and compute capacity for AI training.
💡 Unicorn IPO — a private company valued at $1B+ going public. OpenAI would be a mega-unicorn IPO, one of the largest tech debuts ever, likely to draw massive institutional demand.
Cerebras Systems, a startup that designs custom AI inference chips, is pricing its IPO this week after its 2024 listing was derailed by a national security review, with the company expected to raise $2B+ and be valued at $10B+. The timing is strategic: with Nvidia's training chips commanding premium valuations, investors are hunting for exposure to the inference layer—the cheaper, faster phase where trained models run predictions on real-world data—where Cerebras claims its custom silicon is 10-100x faster than GPUs. The broader narrative signals a structural shift: the AI chip market is fragmenting beyond Nvidia, with startups targeting specific workloads where custom silicon beats general-purpose GPUs, potentially eroding Nvidia's moat over the next 3-5 years.
💡 AI inference — the process of running a trained AI model on new data to generate predictions. It's cheaper and faster than training but requires different hardware optimization.
A team at UC Santa Barbara has developed a liquid solar battery that captures sunlight, stores the energy in chemical bonds, and releases it as heat on demand—potentially for months or years without loss—using a photoswitchable molecule that changes structure when exposed to sunlight. This is a moonshot solution to solar's biggest problem: intermittency, since current battery technology can store energy for hours or days but seasonal storage requires massive, expensive installations. If the technology scales, it could accelerate the global transition to 100% renewable energy by a decade, eliminating the need for natural gas peaker plants and making renewables truly baseload-capable.
💡 Photoswitchable molecule — a chemical compound that changes structure when exposed to light, storing energy in the new configuration. When triggered, it reverts to its original state and releases the stored energy as heat.
Bitcoin declined 2.66% Friday to close at $75,261, extending a week-long selloff as macro headwinds intensify and the 10Y Treasury yielding 4.56% offers a risk-free return that makes volatile crypto less attractive. Spot Bitcoin ETF inflows have slowed to a trickle after weeks of strong demand, signaling that the institutional bid is weakening as geopolitical uncertainty over Iran nuclear talks and Fed hawkishness weigh on sentiment. Bitcoin's correlation with equities has risen to 0.65, meaning it's trading more like a risk asset than a safe haven, so if the S&P 500 corrects 10%+ on recession fears or a geopolitical shock, Bitcoin could easily test $65K support.
💡 Spot ETF inflows — new money flowing into Bitcoin ETFs that hold actual Bitcoin (not futures). Large inflows signal institutional demand; declining inflows suggest a shift in sentiment.
Solana's developer ecosystem is thriving despite a brutal price decline: the blockchain added 11,500+ developers in 2025 (second only to Ethereum's 15,000+), and daily active wallets and transaction volume remain elevated, while SOL fell 2.86% Friday to $86.70, down 71% from its January peak. The Firedancer validator client upgrade, which dramatically improved network performance and reliability, is attracting serious developer interest, and Solana's spot ETFs (launched October 2025) offer staking yields, making SOL ETFs uniquely attractive versus Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs. The long-term bull case is clear: if Solana can maintain network stability and developer momentum, the current price weakness is a buying opportunity, though the near-term risk is that if memecoin speculation (which drives 40%+ of Solana's fee revenue) cools further, transaction volume could collapse.
💡 Firedancer — a new validator client for Solana that optimizes network performance, reducing latency and increasing throughput. It's a critical infrastructure upgrade addressing Solana's historical reliability issues.
A team at UC Santa Barbara has developed a liquid solar battery inspired by DNA that captures sunlight, stores the energy in chemical bonds, and releases it as heat on demand—potentially for months or years without loss—using a photoswitchable molecule that changes structure when exposed to sunlight. This is a moonshot solution to solar's biggest problem: intermittency, since current battery technology can store energy for hours or days, but seasonal storage (summer sun for winter heating) requires massive, expensive installations that make renewables uneconomical in many regions. If the technology scales, it could accelerate the global transition to 100% renewable energy by a decade, eliminating the need for natural gas peaker plants and making renewables truly baseload-capable, which would be one of the most significant breakthroughs in energy history.
💡 Photoswitchable molecule — a chemical compound that changes structure when exposed to light, storing energy in the new configuration. When triggered, it reverts to its original state and releases the stored energy as heat.