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Pre-Market Briefing May 26: Iran Deal, Futures, Gold

Tuesday, May 26, 2026 — Wall Street comes back from the Memorial Day weekend with the same headline that has dictated every tape for the last three months: is Iran going to make a deal, or isn't it? Today's answer, per usual, is "yes, no, maybe, and also we just bombed something." Futures are green, oil is split, gold is bid, and Bitcoin can't decide whether it's a safe haven or a tech stock anymore.

The one-minute brief: Stock futures are higher on renewed US-Iran peace optimism. Crude is split — Brent up on Strait-of-Hormuz risk, WTI down on demand worries from fresh US strikes. Gold trades near $4,529/oz, silver near $76. Bitcoin sits around $77K, Ethereum near $2,100. Heavy data week ahead: Consumer Confidence today, FOMC Minutes Wednesday, Q1 GDP Thursday, PCE Friday.

Futures: Risk-on, Cautiously

Equity futures are pointing to a higher open as traders return from the long weekend. Dow futures popped about 234 points (+0.5%), S&P 500 futures gained 0.7%, and Nasdaq-100 futures led the way higher at +1.1%, all on the back of optimism that the US and Iran are inching toward a framework deal. President Trump said Monday that talks were "proceeding nicely," which in Trump-to-market translation means "buy something." The catch — and there's always a catch — is that the same administration confirmed fresh US "self-defense" strikes in southern Iran early Tuesday, targeting missile launch sites and Iranian boats reportedly attempting to lay mines. So we're negotiating peace while shooting at each other. Classic. CNBC pre-market report.

For traders looking to position around the headline risk, our futures coverage has been tracking the geopolitical premium baked into the major indices since the war began in late February. The short version: every "deal is close" headline is worth roughly 50-70 S&P points to the upside, and every fresh strike or breakdown gives most of that back. Position size accordingly.

S&P 500 Futures — Last Five Sessions
7,520 7,470 7,420 7,370 7,320 May 19 May 20 May 21 May 22 May 26* Bullish Bearish

*May 26 represents pre-market action. Closes are illustrative based on reported levels.

Equities: Watching the Tape

The S&P 500 closed Friday around 7,432, with the Nasdaq Composite at 26,270 and the Dow at 50,009 after Wednesday's powerful 645-point rally on the original "final stages" headline. Bond markets are a different story — HSBC is calling US Treasuries a "danger zone" as long-end yields keep climbing, and BMO's Ian Lyngen warned that further rate moves could start pressuring equities. Translation: stocks are partying, bonds are sweating, and someone is wrong. CNBC market update.

On the single-name front, Ferrari (RACE) is down about 3% in the pre-market after unveiling its first-ever EV — apparently traders don't love the idea of a quiet Ferrari, which is fair. Nvidia, fresh off last week's Q1 print, is hugging the flat line as the AI trade catches its breath. For traders building watchlists, our day trading desk is keeping eyes on energy names (still volatile on every Hormuz headline), defense (LMT, RTX, NOC catching bids on the strike news), and the AI complex for any continuation. Investing.com.

New York Stock Exchange trading floor pre-market session traders
Traders return from the long weekend to a market still pricing the same geopolitical question.

Crypto: Stuck in the Mud

Crypto continues to do its best impression of a tired risk asset rather than digital gold. Bitcoin opened Monday around $76,969 and ticked up to roughly $77,293 by mid-morning — well off the October 2025 all-time high of $126,198. Ethereum is hovering near $2,097, with technical analysts watching the $2,080-$2,180 range for the week and flagging the $2,350-$2,400 zone as the resistance that has rejected every push since February. ETF flows aren't helping either: spot Bitcoin ETFs just shed $1.26 billion in their worst week since late January, and Ethereum funds are on a 10-day outflow streak. Yahoo Finance crypto update.

The narrative shift worth flagging: Jane Street has reportedly trimmed Bitcoin ETF exposure by roughly 70% while adding $82 million in Ethereum ETF positions, hinting at an institutional rotation that nobody on Crypto Twitter wants to admit is happening. If you're trading the majors, our crypto coverage is tracking the BTC dominance and the altcoin tape for signs of the next leg. Cryptopolitan.

AssetPriceFrom Last WeekFrom ATH
Bitcoin (BTC)~$77,293-0.6%-38.7%
Ethereum (ETH)~$2,113-1.5%-57.3%

Metals: Gold Holds, Silver Bleeds

Precious metals are sending mixed signals. Spot gold is trading around $4,529/oz on Tuesday — elevated, but well off recent highs as silver gets taken to the woodshed. Silver has dropped roughly 17-20% since the US-Iran-Israel conflict began, with MCX silver down another 1.8% in the latest session to around ₹2,71,650/kg. The driver is straightforward: energy-driven inflation fears reinforced expectations that central banks stay tighter for longer, which is precious-metal kryptonite — but the recent oil pullback is letting some of that air out. Trading Economics.

If you're trading the metals complex, the cleaner read is that gold remains the geopolitical hedge of choice (still up year-over-year on central bank accumulation), while silver is acting like the industrial-cyclical play it really is. Watch the $4,500 level in gold as near-term support and the $76 zone in silver. LiteFinance analysis.

Gold and silver bars precious metals trading commodities
Gold near $4,529/oz, silver near $76/oz as the safe-haven trade gets a partial pass-through from oil weakness.

The War: Two Steps Forward, One Missile Back

Here's where it stands as of this morning: the US and Iran are reportedly discussing a framework that would extend the current ceasefire for roughly two months, during which Washington would lift its blockade and Tehran would reopen the Strait of Hormuz. A Pakistani mediator reportedly told China that a deal is nearing. Encouraging. The unencouraging part: US Central Command confirmed fresh strikes in southern Iran overnight, hitting missile sites and vessels suspected of attempting to deploy mines, and Trump warned that "additional attacks could follow if negotiations broke down." That's a creative interpretation of "ceasefire." Trading Economics.

The market mechanics matter: Brent climbed about 3.4% to roughly $99/barrel on the renewed strike news, while WTI traded 3.9% lower at $92.85 (no Monday settlement due to the holiday). The split makes sense — Brent prices Middle Eastern crude directly and any Hormuz threat pushes it up, while WTI is more sensitive to the US demand picture and the prospect of a deal that lifts the blockade. Despite Tuesday's bounce, oil is still down more than 10% on the week as deal optimism dominates. Wood Mackenzie estimates Brent could ease to ~$80 by year-end if Hormuz reopens by June. If it doesn't, well, scroll up to the part where Brent hit $126 in April. Our geopolitics coverage has the longer thread on how this conflict has reshaped energy markets. CNBC.

Trading the headline: Spot oil and defense names are now functioning as binary options on the next Truth Social post. If you can't stomach 5%+ gaps on a single tweet, this isn't your tape. Size down, widen stops, or step aside.

High-Impact Data This Week

With markets digesting the geopolitical noise, the back half of the week is loaded with the kind of data that can actually move rates expectations. Three releases matter most: FOMC Minutes on Wednesday, Q1 GDP second estimate on Thursday, and Core PCE on Friday — the Fed's preferred inflation gauge. Markets are looking for confirmation that disinflation is still grinding lower; any upside surprise on PCE will hit duration and growth stocks hard. Initial Jobless Claims also drops Thursday and has quietly become a high-impact print as the labor market shows the first signs of softening after running hot for two years. FXStreet preview.

DayTime (ET)EventImpact
Tue, May 2610:00 AMConference Board Consumer ConfidenceMedium
Tue, May 268:30 AMDurable Goods Orders (Apr)Medium
Wed, May 272:00 PMFOMC Meeting MinutesHigh
Thu, May 288:30 AMQ1 GDP — Second EstimateHigh
Thu, May 288:30 AMInitial Jobless ClaimsMedium
Fri, May 298:30 AMCore PCE Price Index (Apr)High
Fri, May 299:45 AMChicago PMIMedium
Fri, May 2910:00 AMFinal Michigan Consumer SentimentMedium

The Bottom Line

Today's setup is a textbook headline-driven pre-market: bullish gap on peace optimism, capped by the reality that there's still a war going on. Futures are higher, but anyone treating this as a clean buy-the-dip is ignoring three months of evidence that this market reverses on a single Truth Social post. Watch oil for the cleanest geopolitical signal, watch PCE Friday for the cleanest macro signal, and watch your position size in between. For trader education on managing event-driven volatility, our education hub has resources on stops, position sizing, and the mental side of trading binary news flow.

FAQ

Why are stock futures higher this morning?
Futures are up on renewed optimism that the US and Iran are nearing a framework deal that would extend the ceasefire by roughly two months and reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Dow futures gained ~234 points (+0.5%), S&P 500 futures +0.7%, and Nasdaq-100 futures +1.1% in pre-market trading.
Why is Brent crude up but WTI down?
Brent prices Middle Eastern crude more directly, so any threat to the Strait of Hormuz — including fresh US strikes in southern Iran — pushes it higher. WTI is more sensitive to the US demand picture and the prospect of a deal that lifts the US blockade and reintroduces Iranian barrels to the global market.
What are the biggest economic releases this week?
Three high-impact events: FOMC Meeting Minutes on Wednesday (May 27), the second estimate of Q1 GDP on Thursday (May 28), and the Core PCE Price Index — the Fed's preferred inflation gauge — on Friday (May 29). PCE is the most likely to move rates expectations.
Where is Bitcoin trading and why is it down from its highs?
Bitcoin is trading around $77,000-$77,300, well off the October 2025 all-time high of $126,198. The drawdown reflects risk-off positioning around the US-Iran conflict, persistent ETF outflows (spot BTC funds shed $1.26B last week), and an apparent institutional rotation toward Ethereum exposure.
Is the US-Iran war actually ending?
There is real progress on a two-month ceasefire extension framework, but the situation remains highly unstable. The US conducted fresh "self-defense" strikes in southern Iran overnight against missile sites and vessels suspected of laying mines, and President Trump has warned that additional attacks could follow if talks break down. Markets are pricing the deal as more likely than not, but the headline risk is enormous.
Why is silver down so much more than gold?
Silver has dropped roughly 17-20% since the conflict began, while gold has been more resilient. Silver has a larger industrial component, so it's more sensitive to growth and inflation expectations. Energy-driven inflation fears pushed expectations that central banks stay tighter for longer, which hurts industrial demand outlooks. Gold continues to benefit from central bank accumulation and pure geopolitical hedging.