Futures Jump As Micron Revives AI Euphoria, Oil Erases War Gains
Global stocks and S&P futures are higher while Nasdaq futures are on a tear after Micron’s sales forecast blew the lights out, brushing aside fears over a near-term pullback in the AI trade, while Qualcomm set aggressive targets at its investor day in New York. As of 8:00am ET, a revival of the AI demand theme is sending contracts on the Nasdaq 100 up 2.1% while S&P 500 futures are up a more modest 0.7%. MU is +18% pre-market, pushing Semis higher (SOXX +5%, DRAM +12%) while Mag7 - the companies which enable all this chip spending - are mostly lower. As Goldman's Delta 1 desks asks, how much longer will they be willing to see their stock languish while funding semiconductor outperformance? Korea's KOSPI rallied 5.5% overnight (closing well off the highs) and remains ~2.4% below pre-Flash Crash levels. While the AI theme is bid pre-market, this is not an ‘Everything Rally’ with Cyclicals seeing a mixed performance with Banks flat, Regional Banks lower, Energy down with crude, Discretionary mixed, and Materials flat. Within Defensives, Staples are weaker, HC mixed, and AI-related Utils names are higher. Brent crude dropped 1.4% to below $73 a barrel, erasing all Iran war gains, on fears of a supply glut following a ramp-up in flows through the Strait of Hormuz. Bond yields are flat to +2bp as the yield curve steepens, but the USD starts the session lower for the first time in 6 sessions. US economic data calendar includes May personal income/spending, 1Q GDP revision, May durable goods orders, weekly jobless claims and May Chicago Fed national activity index (8:30am) and June Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speaker slate includes Bowman (8:45am), Goolsbee (2pm, 6:30pm) and Williams (3:40pm).
In premarket trading, Micron is 16% higher premarket after its quarterly sales forecast blew past estimates; Qualcomm is up 12% after it estimated more than $15 billion of annual revenues by fiscal 2029 from AI components in data centers. Both look set to challenge all-time highs today. Meanwhile, as semiconductor stocks surge after Micron’s update, the Mag 7 hyperscalers who fund them are all down: Microsoft (MSFT) -0.4%, Amazon (AMZN) -0.5%, Meta Platforms (META) -0.2%, Apple (AAPL) -0.5%, Alphabet (GOOGL) -1.2%
In other corporate news, Lockheed Martin has been awarded a contract worth as much as $35 billion from the Defense Department to quadruple production of missile-defense interceptors as part of a broader effort by the Trump administration to bolster munitions output.
ARS Pharmaceuticals is down 23% premarket after the biotech provided updates on payer access for neffy, its FDA-approved epinephrine nasal spray, and an updated financial outlook for 2026 and 2027.
Nasdaq futs have erupted, following earnings by Micron and an update from Qualcomm. For Micron (+18.4% pre-market), its Q3 adj. EPS and revenue beat estimates while its Q4 guidance also beat consensus. In terms of commentary, they said that tight conditions are expected to persist beyond FY27, and it has no line of sight on when supply can catch up with demand. For Qualcomm (+12% pre-market), the Co. raised its FY29 non-handset revenue target to USD 40bln, while announcing a strategic relationship with Hugging Face to advance open, developer-driven AI from devices to cloud infrastructure.
The US optimism was palpable in other regions too. A benchmark for Asian stocks advanced 1.4%, with Micron peers SK Hynix Inc. and Samsung Electronics Co. rallying in South Korea. The technology sector far outperformed a 0.6% gain in Europe’s Stoxx 600.
The four most dangerous words in finance are now a daily occurrence, especially by people who should know better. Barclays’ global chair of research, recalling the 82% collapse in semiconductor stocks that burst the dotcom bubble, says this time is different. Addressing concerns about a cyclical bust in semis after their meteoric rise was followed by a pullback in early June, Barclays’ Ajay Rajadhyaksha says: “At the risk of using the four most dangerous words in finance, this time is different. Earnings have exploded, order books are full into 2027, and forward multiples are eminently reasonable.”
He says there may eventually come a boom-bust cycle, but not in 2026. “Despite recent equity wobbles, the semiconductor story is real, it is massive, and it is not going away anytime soon,” he adds.
“In a tech sector with strong growth and high expectations, we think investors will continue to look for signals that the AI adoption theme is playing out as expected,” said Richard Flax, chief investment officer at Moneyfarm. “Micron’s strong results are another data point that supports that positive thesis.”
The pre-market indication for Micron is set to comfortably exceed the roughly 10% absolute move implied by the options market. If these gains hold, it will be another example from the AI complex of seemingly expensive pre-earnings options ultimately proving justified by realized price action.
WTI crude is back below $70 a barrel as oil prices for easier global supply. At 8:30 a.m. ET, Bloomberg Economists expects a hot PCE reading will likely reinforce the hawkish tilt by the Fed at its meeting earlier this month. Meanwhile, the dollar is drifting lower ahead of the print.
Attention now turns Thursday to the release of May’s PCE index, the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation gauge. Forecasters expect the data to show acceleration on both a monthly and year-over-year basis. Such a reading is unlikely to challenge a growing consensus at the Fed around the need for interest-rate hikes this year. While investors have dialed back bets on the scale of rate increases over the coming year as oil prices shed their war-driven premium, markets continue to see a hike as soon as September.
“If that comes in near expectations or higher, then we see the dollar drive further north,” said Nick Twidale, chief market analyst at AT Global Markets. “We could also see a dent in the positive risk sentiment.”
Markets will also follow remarks from New York Fed President John Williams, Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman and Austan Goolsbee of the Chicago Fed later today. Given Chair Kevin Warsh’s refusal last week to offer any clues about his own outlook for rates, traders will likely put a premium on commentary from colleagues.
Meanwhile, China kicked off marketing up to €5 billion ($5.7 billion) of sovereign bonds in what could be its largest-ever such deal in euros. Separately, the nation’s central bank is introducing an overnight tenor into its open-market operations, a key step toward reshaping how it steers short-term borrowing costs.
In less notable news, on Wednesday, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Citigroup and Morgan Stanley were among the big banks to boost their dividends after passing the latest Fed fluff stress tests. Separately, Jefferies second-quarter earnings came in light as it pulled in less fees from Point Bonita, which bet on the embattled auto-parts supplier First Brands Group.
Europe's tech-light Stoxx 600 has only engineered a 0.5% gain even as oil prices continue to tumble. Technology and utilities shares leading gains, while the biggest laggards are media and energy equities. Here are the biggest movers Thursday:
Earlier in the session, Asian stocks rose, led by tech gains in South Korea and Japan after a bullish outlook from Micron Technology and Asian chipmakers’ US-listing plans revived confidence in the artificial intelligence trade. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index gained 1.5%, with SK Hynix, Samsung Electronics and Advantest providing the biggest boost to the gauge. Korea’s benchmark rose 5.4%, while the tech-heavy Nikkei 225 Stock Average in Japan climbed 4.6%. Renewed optimism followed US-based Micron’s better-than-expected sales forecast, reinforcing confidence that AI‑driven growth remains strong. The role of Asian chipmakers in the global AI supply chain was underscored as Korea’s SK Hynix and Japan’s Kioxia unveiled further details of plans to list in the US. Shares of SK Hynix surged after disclosing plans for a $29 billion US listing, a move that analysts viewed as boosting valuations through capacity expansion and greater foreign investor access. Kioxia climbed as its CFO said it intends to offer US depositary receipts in the spring of 2027. Here Are the Most Notable Movers
MS&AD Insurance Group Holdings shares fell as much as 5.1%, the most since Mar. 30, following a large discounted block trade.
In FX, the greenback has halted its recent ascent with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index lower by 0.1% but still at levels not seen since November last year. USDJPY trades near a record high just shy of 162, with the BOJ on intervecntion watch.
In rates, the recent rally in Treasuries is pausing for breath with the US 10-year yield up 2bps. Treasuries are slightly cheaper across the curve, unwinding a small portion of Wednesday’s aggressive rally as stock futures advance following Micron’s blowout forecast. Nasdaq 100 futures lead gains as bull case for the artificial-intelligence trade is reaffirmed. US long-end yields are nearly 2bp higher on the day with front-end tenors outperforming, steepening 2s10s curve by 1.5bp from near flattest level in more than a year; 10-year, higher by 1bp near 4.405%, trails bunds and gilts in the sector by 2bp and 1bp. Treasury auction cycle concludes with $44 billion 7-year notes sale at 1pm New York time, following uneventful 2- and 5-year notes over past two days. Focal points of US session include May personal income and spending data, which contain PCE price indexes, and a 7-year note auction.
In commodities, Brent crude futures are down a further 1.4%, having erased their gains since the conflict in Iran began, while WTI crude oil futures are down more than 1% as Middle East exports via the Strait of Hormuz ramp up. The notable downside in energy markets also changes the context in which traders will receive today’s backward-looking US PCE data for May. Spot gold has lost a further 0.2%, having slipped below the $4,000/oz threshold. Bitcoin is rising 1.3%.
Looking at today's calendar, US economic data calendar includes May personal income/spending, 1Q GDP revision, May durable goods orders, weekly jobless claims and May Chicago Fed national activity index (8:30am) and June Kansas City Fed manufacturing activity (11am). Fed speaker slate includes Bowman (8:45am), Goolsbee (2pm, 6:30pm) and Williams (3:40pm)
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APAC stocks traded mixed, albeit with a mostly positive bias and with the KOSPI leading the gains as tech and Nasdaq futures rebounded from the prior day's lows following strong earnings from Micron. ASX 200 was dragged lower by weakness in mining, materials, resources and energy stocks, while better-than-expected headline Australian jobs data failed to inspire and was mostly driven by part-time jobs. Nikkei 225 rallied back above the 72,000 level amid a resurgence in tech and lower oil prices, while markets were unfazed by comments from BoJ hawk Tamura, who called for hiking rates every few months. KOSPI outperformed amid a rally in Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, with the latter sitting on double-digit percentage gains amid its US IPO plans. Hang Seng and Shanghai Comp were mixed in the absence of any major fresh drivers and with the Hong Kong benchmark dragged lower by losses in miners and further weakness in hyperscalers, including Alibaba, after Anthropic accused the Co. of illicitly accessing AI models in a letter to US officials.
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European bourses (STOXX 600 +0.6%) begin Thursday's trade with broad gains, with tech-heavy indices leading following positive Micron earnings (AEX +0.8%, DAX 40 +0.6%). As the Iran conflict fades, with energy prices now reversing the wartime gains, equities in Europe can begin to catch up to their peers in the US and Asia. Investors are also seeing Europe as a safer place to place money due to its lack of tech giants, protecting themselves from any AI-related selloff. European sectors highlight the positive bias. Technology (+2.6%), unsurprisingly, is the clear outperformer. Utilities (+1.5%) and Financial Services (+0.8%) complete the top 3 sectors. To the downside is Media (-0.9%), Food, Beverages & Tobacco (-0.4%) and Chemicals (-0.3%).
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DB's Jim Reid concludes the overnight wrap
Markets are in a buoyant mood this morning, with Brent crude oil prices finally back at their pre-conflict levels. They’ve fallen another -1.70% overnight to $72.49/bbl, which is almost exactly in line with their $72.48/bbl level immediately before the US and Israel began their strikes on Iran on February 28. It comes as flows through the Strait of Hormuz have continued to ramp up, with the number of vessels getting through at its highest since the conflict started. And more broadly, the oil price decline has eased fears about a stagflationary shock and aggressive rate hikes to deal with any inflation.
Alongside the oil price declines, the other positive story overnight came from Micron’s earnings after the US close. Their revenue outlook was at $50bn for the fiscal fourth quarter running through August, well above the $43.2bn analyst consensus. So that reignited hopes about AI-fuelled growth and helped to push back against fears we were in some kind of bubble. And in turn, Micron’s shares surged nearly 16% in after-hours trading, and futures on the NASDAQ 100 have also surged +1.77% overnight. So that tech strength has helped to lift US equities more broadly, with S&P 500 futures up +0.53%, finally pointing to a recovery after 3 consecutive losses for the index.
This positivity has been clear in Asian markets overnight, with the Nikkei (+4.10%) and the KOSPI (+5.73%) both surging, alongside a strong gain for the CSI 300 (+1.61%). The main exception to that pattern has been the Hang Seng (-1.38%), which is currently on course for a one-year low. But otherwise, sentiment has been very positive, and the Japanese Yen has also stabilised overnight, up +0.03% to 161.73 per US Dollar. For reference, it closed at its weakest since 1986 yesterday, at 161.78 per US Dollar, although it hasn’t quite got to the intraday low in that time, as it briefly traded at 161.95 back in July 2024.
Ahead of that overnight positivity, oil prices had already seen a decent decline, with Brent crude falling -4.33% to $73.74/bbl. In part, that was thanks to growing signs of more traffic flowing through the Strait of Hormuz. Moreover, multiple US officials were sounding negative over the prospect of tolls in the Strait of Hormuz. For instance, Trump posted that Iran had informed the US there would be no tolls or charges in the Strait of Hormuz, and that “If this is false information, negotiations would end, immediately!” Meanwhile, Secretary of State Rubio said that “No country is allowed to charge tolls or fees on an international waterway”. So the newsflow led to growing optimism about a normalisation in the energy market, which would help to avoid any lasting inflationary consequences.
This backdrop helped equities to stabilise after their losses on Monday and Tuesday, with the S&P 500 (-0.10%) only posting a modest decline. That came as the Mag 7 (-0.82%) fell further into correction territory, having now fallen -11.6% since its May 28 peak, whilst the S&P 500’s energy sector (-1.73%) also struggled amid the decline in oil prices. But there was some positivity more broadly, with almost two-thirds of the S&P constituents higher on the day, leaving the equal-weighted S&P 500 up +0.71%. And over in Europe, the STOXX 600 (+0.08%) posted a marginal gain as well.
Whilst equities were stabilising, there were much bigger milestones for sovereign bonds, as lower oil prices helped to ease concerns about inflation. In fact, the 1yr US inflation swap (-12.3bps) fell to just 2.16%, marking its lowest level since October 2024. And over in the Euro Area, the 1yr inflation swap (-14.0bps) fell to a 3-month low of 2.31%. So in turn, that meant investors priced out the chance of rate hikes for the months ahead. For instance, just 35bps of Fed hikes are now priced in by December, down -2.9bps on the day. And similarly for the ECB, just 29bps more hikes are priced in by December, down -2.5bps on the day.
For sovereign bonds, that combination of easing inflation fears and more dovish central bank pricing was a strong one. So yields saw very large falls on both sides of the Atlantic, and the 10yr Treasury yield (-10.5bps) fell back to 4.39%. That was echoed in Europe too, where yields on 10yr bunds (-5.5bps) reached a 3-month low of 2.86%, whilst yields on 10yr OATs (-5.2bps) and BTPs (-5.5bps) also moved lower. There was also a decent round of yield curve flattening, as longer-dated yields posted bigger falls than the front-end. So the 2s10s Treasury curve (-5.4bps) fell to just 24bps by the close, its flattest since March 2025. And over in Germany, the 2s10s curve (-2.1bps) fell to 32bps, its flattest since February 2025.
Otherwise in Europe, those yield declines saw a modest pullback after hawkish comments from the ECB’s Schnabel. It wasn’t enough to outweigh the effect of lower oil prices, but she pointed to more hikes ahead, saying the ECB “will need to continue raising interest rates in order to bring inflation back to our target of 2% in the medium term”. Moreover, she also said that “the ceasefire is no reason for monetary policy to let its guard down”. So those comments re-affirmed Schnabel’s position at the hawkish end of the ECB Governing Council.
Here in the UK, gilts continued to outperform their European counterparts, reflecting how they’ve seen some of the biggest moves in either direction since the Iran conflict began. So the 10yr gilt yield fell -7.2bps yesterday to 4.68%, its lowest level in 3 months.
Meanwhile on the political side, Chief Secretary to the PM Darren Jones ruled himself out of succeeding Keir Starmer as Labour leader. So that meant expectations continued to rise that Andy Burnham could win without a contest, and the Polymarket probability of him becoming PM in 2026 is now at 98%. Speaking of the UK, the Deutsche Bank Research Institute piece on the 10th anniversary of the Brexit referendum can be found here, and to those who’ve signed up to the event today, it’s still going ahead.
Elsewhere, there were a few other notable market moves yesterday. The dollar index (+0.20%) continued its recent rise, reaching its highest level since May last year. Then on the opposite end, gold fell below the $4,000 level for the first time since November (-2.86% to $3,999/oz) and is now more than -25% below its January peak. Meanwhile, yesterday saw Bitcoin reach its lowest intraday level since October 2024, at $59,023, although it’s since recovered this morning to $60,956.
Finally, there were a couple of other data releases yesterday, including the Ifo Institute’s business climate indicator from Germany. That rose to 85.6 in June (vs. 85.5 expected), marking a second monthly gain after falling back in March and April. Interestingly, the current assessment indicator was up to 87.0, its highest since July 2024, but the expectations indicator only rose to 84.1, still clearly beneath its levels before the Iran conflict. Over in the US, we also got new home sales for May, which unexpectedly fell to an annualised rate of 580k in May (vs. 640k expected).
Looking at the day ahead now, US data releases include the PCE inflation reading for May, the third estimate of Q1 GDP, the weekly initial jobless claims, and preliminary durable goods orders for May. Otherwise from central banks, we’ll hear from the ECB’s Moulin, Lane, Cipollone, and the Fed’s Bowman, Williams and Goolsbee. Meanwhile, the ECB will also publish their Economic Bulletin.



