Hot CPI Hangover, Iran War on Life Support, and Trump Lands in Beijing — Everything Moving Markets Before the Bell
Futures wobble after Tuesday's chip-led pullback. Oil hovers above $100. Bitcoin clings to $80K. Traders brace for PPI, Cisco, and a high-stakes Trump-Xi summit — all in one trading day.
The 30-Second Setup
If you slept through Tuesday, congratulations — you missed a hotter-than-expected CPI print, a 13% face-plant in Qualcomm, a 4% pop in oil, and the President declaring the Iran ceasefire is on "massive life support." Markets are now staring down April PPI before the bell, Cisco earnings after it, and a Trump-Xi summit happening in Beijing as we speak. Hope you brought coffee. [CNBC]
Futures Snapshot
U.S. equity futures are trying to claw back some of Tuesday's losses, with S&P 500 futures up 0.3% and Nasdaq 100 futures up roughly 0.86% — a classic "buy the dip in tech, ignore the macro" reflex. Dow futures, meanwhile, are dragging about 102 points lower because someone has to hold the bag. The bigger story is that the Nasdaq is trying to bounce after dropping 0.71% on Tuesday when chip stocks decided to remember that gravity exists. [CNBC]
Overnight & Asia Recap: Trump in Beijing, Markets Shrug
Asia-Pacific markets traded mixed overnight as investors digested the hotter U.S. CPI print and waited to see if the world's two most powerful men can be in the same room without imposing tariffs on each other. South Korea's Kospi led gains with a +1.21% jump (because nothing says "risk-on" like a country whose biggest export is memory chips). Japan's Nikkei 225 added 0.22%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng was effectively flat, Australia's ASX 200 slipped 0.26%, and China's CSI 300 was down 0.34% — apparently the home team isn't taking any chances ahead of the summit. [CNBC Asia]
The marquee event of the overnight session is President Trump's arrival in Beijing for a high-stakes summit with President Xi Jinping, where trade, AI, Taiwan, and the Iran war are all reportedly on the menu. He brought along 16 U.S. CEOs for backup — including Tesla's Elon Musk and Apple's Tim Cook — presumably so somebody in the room actually knows what a semiconductor is. Markets are pricing in cautious optimism, but cautious is doing a lot of heavy lifting in that sentence. [Yahoo Finance]
The Iran War: "Massive Life Support" Edition
The month-old U.S.-Iran ceasefire is, per the President himself, "unbelievably weak" and on "massive life support" after Trump rejected Iran's latest counterproposal Sunday as "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE!" (caps lock his, not ours). Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth helpfully added that Trump doesn't need congressional approval to restart strikes, since the 60-day War Powers clock has already expired — a comment that did wonders for nobody's blood pressure. [CNBC]
The war's footprint on global commodities is impossible to ignore. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively closed, with Saudi Aramco warning that roughly 100 million barrels per week of supply is being lost. WTI settled Tuesday at $102.18 per barrel after a 4.19% surge, though it's pulled back about 1.2% overnight as traders take a breath. For context, oil is the single biggest reason your April CPI just printed at a three-year high — but more on that disaster in a moment. [NordFX Morning Update]
What Moved Markets on Tuesday
Tuesday was a story of two markets. The S&P 500 closed 0.16% lower at 7,400.96, the Nasdaq Composite fell 0.71% to 26,088.20, and the Dow somehow inched up 0.11% to 49,760.56 — proving once again that boring industrial stocks have their day every now and again. The villain of the session was the chip sector, with the iShares Semiconductor ETF (SOXX) sinking 5% in its worst day in months. [CNBC]
Qualcomm led the carnage with a 13% nosedive — its worst session since 2020 — followed by Intel (-8%), On Semi and Skyworks (each down more than 6%), AMD (-2%), and Micron (-3.6%). Yes, this is the same Micron that was up 53% in April and 37% last week. Apparently, the laws of physics still apply to memory chips. The pullback was widely characterized as profit-taking after a "parabolic run," which is finance-speak for "what goes up at a 45-degree angle eventually remembers what gravity is." [Yahoo Finance]
The CPI Bomb
April headline CPI rose 0.6% month-over-month and 3.8% year-over-year — the highest annual reading since May 2023 — beating the 3.7% Dow Jones consensus. Core CPI rose 0.4% MoM and 2.8% YoY. Energy was the obvious culprit at +17.9% YoY, with gasoline up a delightful 28.4%. Real wages fell 0.5% on the month, which is the kind of stat that makes consumers reach for the credit card and economists reach for the antacid. [NordFX]
The CME FedWatch tool is now pricing in a ~98% chance the Fed holds rates steady at the June meeting and a roughly 30% chance of a rate hike by December. Rate cuts for 2026 are functionally dead. Some traders are now openly pricing a 70%+ chance of a hike by early 2027. So much for that "second or third inning of the easing cycle" pitch. [Yahoo Finance]
Crypto Corner: Risk-Off, As Expected
Crypto did exactly what it does when bond yields rise and the Middle East catches fire: it sold off. Bitcoin slid below $81,000 to trade around $80,389 on Tuesday, while Ethereum dropped about 3% to roughly $2,259. Bitcoin is still holding the $80K psychological level for now, but that line in the sand is starting to look more like a line in the wet sand at high tide. [Yahoo Finance]
For context, Bitcoin's all-time high of $126,198 from October 2025 feels like ancient history at this point. The crypto thesis was simple: rate cuts coming, AI infrastructure boom, Trump's strategic Bitcoin reserve dreams. Two of three of those tailwinds have now turned into headwinds, and the third (AI) just had a 5% rug-pull session. If you bought the $90K dip in January, you're currently learning what "structural support" really means. [CoinDesk]
This Morning's Pre-Market Movers to Watch
| Ticker | Status | The Story |
|---|---|---|
| CSCO | Earnings AMC | Cisco reports fiscal Q3 after the close. Guided $15.4-15.6B revenue / $1.02-1.04 EPS (above the $15.2B / $0.95 Street). Options pricing a ~9.87% move. AI infrastructure orders are the entire ballgame. |
| BABA | Earnings | Alibaba reports during a literal Trump-Xi summit. What could possibly go wrong? |
| MU / NVDA / AMD | Bounce watch | After getting taken to the woodshed Tuesday, semis are trying to stabilize. Watch for dip buyers vs. trend-reversal. |
| QCOM | Recovery? | Down 13% Tuesday on no real news. Either a screaming buy or a falling knife — pick your bias. |
| Energy (XLE) | Mixed | Oil pulling back overnight but still over $100. Energy names remain the only place to hide from the Iran trade. |
| BIRK / STUB | Earnings | Birkenstock and StubHub also report. Consumer health check. |
The biggest single-name event today is unquestionably Cisco after the close. The stock is up ~30% YTD on AI infrastructure demand, sitting near $98.72 with options pricing a near-10% move. Wall Street's high target is $110 (Evercore ISI). Bull case: hyperscaler order book accelerates past $5B FY guide. Bear case: gross margins crack under memory-cost pressure and the Splunk cloud transition keeps dragging. [Barchart via Yahoo]
High-Impact Economic Releases This Week
| Day | Time (ET) | Event | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed, May 13 | 8:30 AM | Producer Price Index (April) | HIGH |
| Wed, May 13 | 10:30 AM | EIA Crude Oil Inventories | MED-HIGH |
| Wed, May 13 | AMC | Cisco (CSCO) Earnings | HIGH |
| Thu, May 14 | 8:30 AM | Retail Sales (April) | HIGH |
| Thu, May 14 | 8:30 AM | Initial Jobless Claims | MED |
| Thu, May 14 | 8:30 AM | Import/Export Prices (April) | MED |
| Thu, May 14 | 10:00 AM | Business Inventories (March) | LOW |
| Thu, May 14 | 5:45 PM | NY Fed President Williams speaks | MED-HIGH |
| Thu, May 14 | AMC | Applied Materials (AMAT) | MED-HIGH |
| Fri, May 15 | 9:15 AM | Industrial Production / Capacity Utilization | MED |
April PPI at 8:30 AM is the headline event before the bell. After yesterday's CPI surprise, anything hotter than consensus could send rate-hike pricing meaningfully higher and put another beating on growth stocks. A cool print would offer some relief, but the bar is low for an "uh-oh" reaction. Retail Sales Thursday morning will tell us whether the consumer has finally cracked under $6 gas. [CNBC Week Ahead]
The Bottom Line
Today is one of those rare sessions where geopolitics, monetary policy, mega-cap earnings, and inflation data all collide in a single 24-hour window. Pre-market action is suggesting a modest tech-led bounce after Tuesday's chip drubbing, but futures positioning will mean exactly nothing the moment that 8:30 AM PPI print hits. Watch oil for the Iran headline reaction, watch Cisco for the AI capex pulse, and watch Bitcoin to see whether $80K holds as a floor or becomes the next round number we're nostalgic for. [CNBC]
"This market does not want to go down because of the tech boom." — Jay Hatfield, Infrastructure Capital Advisors. We'll see if that thesis survives contact with PPI day and a fresh missile headline.
















