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Pre-Market Brief: Hawkish Fed, Iran Deal Rattle Markets

Pre-Market Brief · Thursday, June 18, 2026 · 7:30 AM ET

The two-second version: A newly hawkish Fed handed traders a yields-up, dollar-up hangover on Wednesday — and the market shrugged it off overnight because Washington signed a peace deal with Iran that’s about to dump cheap oil back onto the world. Tech futures are green, oil is bleeding, and gold and crypto are caught in the crossfire. Risk-on equities, risk-off everything-that-doesn’t-pay-interest.

Good morning. Yesterday the market met the Fed it had been dreading. In Chairman Kevin Warsh’s first meeting at the helm, the FOMC held rates steady but the projections and tone took a decidedly hawkish turn — the dot plot quietly retired its rate-cut and started flirting with a hike, and Warsh hammered the point that inflation has sat above the 2% target for years. Translation for anyone still pricing cuts: please update your priors. Equities closed lower on the day as that message sank in, per CoinDesk.

Then, overnight, the cavalry: President Trump signed an interim agreement with Iran to suspend hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, with reports the deal also lifts sanctions on Iranian oil exports. Crude promptly fell out of bed, and stock futures — especially tech — took the cheaper-energy, lower-inflation handoff and ran with it. The formal signing is reportedly slated for Friday, which means the headline risk isn’t done with you yet, according to Trading Economics.

The Pre-Market Snapshot

InstrumentLevelMoveRead
Nasdaq-100 futures (NQ)30,387+1.29%Tech leads, chips bid
Dow futures (YM)52,038+0.18%Lagging the Nas
Russell 2000 futures2,967.70+0.85%Small caps tag along
VIX17.51−5.0%Fear coming off
WTI Crude (Jul)$74.63−1.8%Hormuz reopening
Gold~$4,260–4,300−2.8%Hawkish Fed bite
Bitcoin$63,898−1.7%ETF outflows
Ethereum$1,745−2.3%Bleeding with BTC

Levels are approximate, early-cash-session reads. Index-futures and crypto figures via Yahoo Finance.

Mon Tue Wed Thu* record Fed Iran deal
Index futures, the week in candles (stylized). Two record-chasing green sessions, a hawkish-Fed red day Wednesday, and a premarket bid Thursday. *Thursday reflects overnight/pre-cash action.

Equities: Chips Do the Heavy Lifting

The single biggest pre-market story is Intel ripping roughly 8–9% after Trump said Apple has agreed to work with the chipmaker to design and build chips in the U.S. Whether or not the details survive contact with reality, the tape doesn’t care this morning — it wants the narrative, and “American chips” is a narrative. Marvell tacked on about 6% and Fortrea jumped 7% in sympathy, while the losers’ bracket featured NovoCure down nearly 19%, Accenture off about 16%, and Cognizant lower by 5%, per TheStreet.

For NQ traders, the setup is the familiar one: a gap higher driven by a single mega-cap headline, into a market that just got told rate cuts are off the menu. That’s a recipe for a fast open and an even faster fade if the chip enthusiasm runs out of buyers. If you’re scalping the New York open, respect the gap, let the auction show its hand, and don’t marry the first 9:30 candle — size and stops first, conviction second. Run your numbers through the TSL position-size and risk tools before you click.

Futures & Macro: A Hawk and a Peace Deal Walk Into a Bar

This is the tension defining every screen today. The hawkish Fed pushed short-term Treasury yields and the dollar higher — classic headwind for anything that doesn’t generate yield. The Iran deal pushes oil and inflation expectations lower — classic tailwind for equity multiples and the duration trade. So you get the slightly schizophrenic tape: stocks up, oil down, bonds and the dollar firm. Keep one eye on the energy complex, because the entire “lower inflation” leg of the bull case rests on Hormuz actually reopening, per Trading Economics.

The calendar is the wildcard. The formal Iran signing is reportedly Friday, so a “buy the rumor” tape today can flip to “sell the news” tomorrow with one wire headline. Layer in a Fed that just told markets futures-implied odds of a 2026 hike are uncomfortably real, and you have a session where macro can override price action without warning. Glance at the economic calendar before the open so nothing on the wire surprises you mid-trade.

Crypto: Sliding Despite the Good News

Here’s the tell. Bitcoin and ether are lower even with a signed peace deal that should be risk-positive — BTC near $63,900 (down ~1.7%) and ETH around $1,745 (down ~2.3%). The culprit isn’t geopolitics; it’s the Fed. When rate-cut hopes died on Wednesday, spot ETFs swung back to outflows, with bitcoin and ether funds shedding a combined ~$111 million, and bitcoin briefly slipped below its 200-week moving average — a level technicians treat as a line in the sand, per CoinDesk.

For now, crypto is trading like a high-beta risk asset chained to real yields, not the inflation hedge the bulls keep promising. XRP and the majors are leaking right alongside it. If you’re using crypto as a sentiment gauge for your NQ session — and plenty of futures traders quietly do — the message is “risk appetite is thinner than the green equity futures suggest,” via Yahoo Finance.

Metals: The Hawk’s Favorite Chew Toy

Gold took it on the chin, dropping nearly 2% Wednesday as the hawkish Fed lit a fire under short-term yields — and when cash pays you and gold pays you nothing, gold loses that argument every time. The metal clawed back above $4,300 Thursday on safe-haven flickers around the Iran signing before settling into a choppy $4,260–4,300 range. The structural buyers (central banks, the de-dollarization crowd) are still there; they’re just not in a hurry while real rates are positive and rising, per Trading Economics.

Zoom out and this is the same movie metals have been in since the January blow-off, when an overcrowded, over-leveraged trade snapped and gold and silver printed their worst sessions in decades. The current grind lower is the hangover, not a new crisis — analysts still flag central-bank buying as a floor while warning that silver, the more industrial and more volatile of the two, stays the riskier seat, according to CBS News.

What Could Move Markets Today

The short list, in order of how badly it can ruin or make your morning: (1) any Iran headline as the Friday signing approaches — a hiccup reopens the oil risk premium instantly; (2) follow-through or fade on the Intel/Apple chip story, which is currently carrying NQ on its back; (3) Fedspeak, because a freshly hawkish committee loves to reinforce the message; and (4) the dollar and short-end yields — if they push higher, expect renewed pressure on gold and crypto regardless of the equity tape. Trade the levels, not the narrative, and keep your risk defined. If you want to rehearse the open without burning capital, the NQ replay simulator is right there.

FAQ

Why are stock futures up if the Fed turned hawkish?
The hawkish Fed is a headwind, but it’s being offset by the signed U.S.–Iran deal, which is pushing oil and inflation expectations lower. Cheaper energy supports equity valuations, and tech is leading on a separate catalyst — the Intel/Apple chip headline. Net result: stocks up, oil down, dollar and yields firm.
Why is gold falling instead of rallying on Middle East news?
Because the bigger driver right now is the Fed, not geopolitics. A hawkish Fed lifts short-term yields and the dollar, raising the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold. The peace deal also reduces safe-haven demand. Both forces point the same direction: lower.
Why is crypto down when the news looks risk-positive?
Crypto is trading as a high-beta risk asset tied to interest-rate expectations. When the Fed killed near-term rate-cut hopes, spot bitcoin and ether ETFs swung back to outflows (~$111M combined), and bitcoin slipped below its 200-week moving average. Rates trumped the peace-deal optimism.
What’s the single biggest risk for traders today?
Headline risk around the Iran signing, reportedly set for Friday. A “buy the rumor” tape today can flip to “sell the news” fast. Combined with a hawkish Fed willing to reinforce its message, macro can override price action intraday — so define risk before the open.

This brief is for informational and educational purposes only and is not financial advice. Markets are volatile; do your own research and manage your risk. Prices are approximate pre-market reads and will change.