Pre-Market Briefing — Thursday, June 11, 2026
Good morning. Futures are green, which is a sentence that hasn’t gotten much use lately. After Wednesday served up the hottest CPI print in three years, a 900-point Dow faceplant, and a fresh round of U.S. airstrikes on Iran, the market has apparently decided this morning that everything is fine because the strikes ended quickly. S&P 500 futures are up roughly 0.7% as of early New York trading, with chipmakers leading the bounce. Bloomberg
Market Snapshot
| Asset | Level | Change | Vibe |
|---|---|---|---|
| NQ (Nasdaq 100 futures) | ~28,900 | +1.2% | Bouncing off the 28,850 shelf |
| ES (S&P 500 futures) | — | +0.3% to +0.7% | Relief rally, asterisk included |
| Dow futures | — | +184 pts (+0.4%) | Licking Wednesday’s wounds |
| Bitcoin | ~$63,000 | +2.5% | Risk-on tone, off the lows |
| Ethereum | ~$1,660 | Firming | Still a long way from $4,950 |
| Gold | ~$4,112 | -0.5% | Flirting with the $4,098 cycle low |
| Silver | ~$64.12 | -0.96% | Following gold lower |
| WTI Crude | ~$90 | Choppy | Hostage to headlines |
| VIX | ~20.6 | -7% | Deflating, for now |
Futures: NQ Tries to Climb Out of the Hole
Nasdaq 100 futures are up around 0.6% to 1.2% depending on when you checked, with NQ trading near 28,900 after Wednesday’s 2.07% drubbing. S&P futures gained about 0.3% and Dow futures added 184 points as chip stocks rebounded from days of relentless selling. Translation: the same semiconductors that vaporized a trillion dollars of market cap last week are now the reason futures are green. Markets are nothing if not consistent. CNBC
The bigger picture on NQ: after printing all-time highs above 30,000 in late May, the index pulled back hard into the 28,850 support zone, where buyers have started showing up. Price is still holding above both the 50-day and 200-day moving averages, so the uptrend technically lives — but this is a market that dropped 2,000 points in three sessions earlier this month, so maybe don’t size up like it’s a quiet summer chop day. OneUp Trader
Equities: Oracle Discovers AI Is Expensive
The pre-market movers list is a tale of two AI narratives. Oracle dropped more than 9% despite beating on earnings and revenue, because it told investors it plans to raise tens of billions in fresh debt and equity to fund its AI buildout — roughly $40 billion through 2027 by one count. Beating estimates and then announcing you need a mountain of new financing is the corporate equivalent of winning a poker hand and immediately asking the table for a loan. TheStreet
Meanwhile the chips that got obliterated last week are catching a bid: Intel up 4.8% pre-market, with Applied Materials and Lam Research each up around 4.6%. Elsewhere, travel platform Navan jumped 18% on strong guidance. Wednesday’s carnage for context: the Dow fell 898 points (-1.76%) to 49,974, the S&P lost 1.62%, and the Nasdaq 100 dropped 1.98% after CPI came in at its hottest level in three years, courtesy of the oil spike. Trading Economics
Crypto: Bitcoin Wakes Up
Bitcoin is up about 2.5% this morning to roughly $63,000, climbing alongside the broader risk-on tone after opening near $61,456. Ethereum firmed to around $1,660 after opening at $1,620 — which sounds nice until you remember ETH’s all-time high was nearly $4,950 last August. Crypto bouncing on the same morning the U.S. is conducting airstrikes and producer inflation is expected near 6.4% is either impressive resilience or impressive denial; the chart will let us know which. Yahoo Finance
Metals: Gold Can’t Catch a Bid
Here’s the part that should make you squint: gold is down about 0.5% to roughly $4,112 while the U.S. and Iran trade strikes. Silver fell about 1% to $64.12. The culprit is the rates picture — hot inflation has markets pricing Fed hikes rather than cuts, and rising yields are bullying bullion harder than war headlines are supporting it. Technically, sellers are eyeing a break of the $4,098 cycle low; lose that and $4,000 is in play, with $3,886 as the next meaningful demand zone below. When gold sells off during a shooting war, take the hint about what’s actually driving this tape. FXStreet
News That Can Move the Tape
1. U.S.–Iran: The Headline Machine
U.S. Central Command carried out additional strikes against Iran late Wednesday at President Trump’s direction, after Trump posted that the U.S. would attack “VERY HARD” and floated taking Kharg Island and other oil infrastructure. Iran claimed the Strait of Hormuz was closed — a claim the U.S. military rejected — and three Indian seafarers died in a strike on a tanker amid the port blockade. Futures rallied because the latest strikes ended quickly, but this remains a market where one Truth Social post can reprice crude by two dollars. WTI is hovering near $90. Keep your finger off the full-size contracts when headlines hit. Benzinga
2. PPI + Jobless Claims, 8:30 AM ET
The May Producer Price Index drops at 8:30 a.m. Eastern, one day after CPI ruined everyone’s Wednesday. Consensus has headline PPI accelerating to around 6.4% year-over-year from 6.0%, with core climbing to 5.4% — pipeline inflation that eventually lands on consumers. Initial jobless claims print at the same time, expected around 219K. A hot PPI on top of yesterday’s CPI would be the kind of one-two punch that makes the morning’s relief rally look very temporary. This is the highest-risk 30 seconds of the session; plan accordingly. BLS
3. ECB Decision
Across the pond, the European Central Bank is expected to hike its benchmark rate by 25 basis points today to fight the oil-driven inflation impulse from the Iran conflict. Futures markets have also been pricing the Fed toward additional tightening by early 2027. Central banks hiking into a geopolitical crisis is not the 2020s playbook anyone ordered, but here we are. Business Standard
4. SpaceX IPO Friday
Tech sentiment also has tomorrow’s closely watched SpaceX IPO looming over it, which contributed to this week’s caution in growth names. A mega-IPO landing in the middle of a chip selloff, an inflation scare, and a regional war is certainly a choice — and how it trades will be read as a referendum on risk appetite either way. Trading Economics
The Bottom Line
This is a bounce inside a correction inside a war headline cycle, with a major inflation print landing at 8:30 and a central bank decision stacked on top. The morning strength is real, but it’s built on “the strikes ended quickly” — a foundation roughly as sturdy as it sounds. Trade the levels, respect the data window, and if you’re on a prop account, remember the firm’s risk desk doesn’t grade on geopolitical difficulty. If volatile conditions have you re-evaluating which firm’s drawdown rules you can actually survive, the Prop Firm True Cost hub breaks down what these accounts really cost when the tape gets ugly.
















