Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq rebound, oil prices reverse on hopes of a US-Iran peace deal

May 21, 2026
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Updated 1 min read

US stocks reversed losses on Thursday and turned higher on reports that an agreement between the US and Iran had been reached with Pakistani mediation and after Secretary of State Marco Rubio said there were “some good signs” that a deal to end the war in Iran could be in sight.

The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) rose by 0.2% after a winning day on Wall Street, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) added 0.3% following earnings from Nvidia and an S-1 filing for the upcoming IPO of SpaceX on Wednesday afternoon. The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) gained 0.5%.

Oil prices edged lower after rising throughout the morning, with Brent crude oil (BZ=F) falling back to $104 per barrel and US West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) dropping below $100 again. Earlier in the day, oil rose after Iran’s supreme leader issued a directive that the country’s near-weapons-grade uranium should not be sent abroad, raising doubts about the progress of peace talks between the US and Iran.

Hopes that the end of the war could be on the horizon emerged after Iranian media said a finalized deal that would guarantee passage through the Strait of Hormuz and implement a ceasefire would be announced imminently.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio also said there were “some good signs” of a deal but added that he didn’t “want to be overly optimistic.”

Meanwhile, investors continued to assess Nvidia’s (NVDA) earnings that landed after the bell on Wednesday, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines. The AI giant also issued an upbeat forecast for chip sales, but investors had hoped for an even stronger signal of demand.

LIVE 14 updates

  • Jake Conley

    Oil prices reverse to losses on news that US and Iran may be close to announcing deal to push forward negotiations

    Oil prices abruptly reversed course Thursday afternoon on news that the US and Iran may be only hours away from announcing terms for peace negotiations.

    Futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, fell to a loss of 2.6%, trading around $102.30 per barrel after gaining as much as 3.5% in the other direction on the news. Those on US benchmark WTI crude (CL=F) fell to a loss of 2.5% to trade below $96 after rising as much as 4% earlier in the session.

    The US and Iran have reached an agreement, mediated by Pakistan, that includes a full ceasefire, “freedom of navigation” in the Persian Gulf and Strait of Hormuz, and a gradual lifting of economic sanctions on Iran, the Iranian semi-official news agency ILNA said in a post on Telegram.

    While the post from the ILNA made no mention of Iran’s nuclear enrichment program, it stated that negotiations on “outstanding issues” would begin within seven days.

    Oil prices had spiked to start the day after Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei said the regime’s stores of enriched uranium shouldn’t be sent abroad, throwing a wrench into dealmaking between the US and the Islamic Republic.

    Prices spiked Thursday morning after Reuters reported that the supreme leader had issued an edict saying the regime’s stores of uranium enriched to near-weapons-grade levels should not be sent outside Iran.

    The development complicates negotiations between Iran and the US, where the White House has said the removal of Iran’s enriched uranium supply is a key red line for any deal.

  • Jake Conley

    Richmond Fed president says supply shocks are testing Fed’s ability to look through inflation

    Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond president Tom Barkin said the recent litany of supply shocks to the US economy is testing the central bank’s capacity to look through inflation increases.

    “With inflation above our 2% target for over five years now, it’s worth asking whether the cumulative impact of so many waves risks loosening the anchor,” Barkin said Thursday, as quoted by Bloomberg. “For me, it comes down to how much businesses, consumers, and inflation expectations can take.”

    As the closure of the Strait of Hormuz has wracked energy markets and sent the wider commodities complex on metals, food, fertilizers, and other products surging, the Federal Reserve has kept interest rates steady.

    But Wall Street economists and market participants are increasingly moving predictions toward a rate hike as the next move, instead of the cuts expected at the start of the year. Inside the Federal Reserve, a majority of members indicated that raising rates might become necessary to fight inflation during the bank’s April meeting, according to minutes released on Wednesday.

    Roughly 60% of traders see rates ending the year higher than they are now, according to CME data.

    Barkin said he’s concerned the US economy is entering a new era that will be categorized by more frequent supply shocks as geopolitical tension, a breakdown in the global trade order, rising government debt, and other factors ripple through the economy.

    He said the Fed’s policy stance now is “well-positioned” to respond throughout the rest of the year.

  • Intuit CFO calls AI an ‘overused narrative’ for layoffs after announcing 3,000 job cuts

    Intuit (INTU) stock plummeted 21% in afternoon trading on Thursday after the TurboTax parent company’s quarterly results added to concerns about whether artificial intelligence would disrupt Intuit’s business.

    On Wednesday, the financial software company announced it was cutting about 17% of its workforce, or around 3,000 positions. CFO Sandeep Aujla told Yahoo Finance that, unlike a lot of tech layoffs these days, AI wasn’t a factor in the decision to restructure the company.

    “These weren’t related to, ‘hey, we’re using AI technology, etc., and that’s why we need fewer people,’” Aujla told Yahoo Finance (see video below). “Frankly, I think the whole AI leading to job cuts is a bit [of an] overused narrative in the marketplace.”

    Aujla explained that Intuit’s staff reduction is intended to accomplish three goals: “Make the company flatter, make the company more focused, so it can move a lot faster.”

    Tech layoffs have accelerated so far in 2026, with companies like Meta (META) and Oracle (ORCL) cutting roles. According to Layoffs.fyi, which tracks these announcements in the tech sector, 114,173 tech workers have been laid off this year. Still, as my colleague Jake Conley alluded to earlier (scroll down to read his blog), the question of whether AI will lead to mass job loss or other distortions remains unsettled.

  • Rise in bond yields pushes mortgage rates above 6.5%

    A dramatic spike in bond yields in recent days pushed mortgage rates above 6.5% for the week. The 10-year Treasury yield (^TNX), which mortgage rates closely track, has risen roughly 15 basis points over the past week to around 4.6%.

    Yahoo Finance’s Claire Boston and Tim Manni report:

    The average 30-year mortgage rate was 6.51% through Wednesday, according to Freddie Mac data, up from 6.36% a week earlier. Other measures have reported even higher numbers: The Mortgage Bankers Association calculated the average at 6.56% — a seven-week high — for the week through Friday, while Mortgage News Daily showed average rates at 6.67% as of Wednesday.

    “Higher Treasury yields continued to push mortgage rates higher last week, weighing on affordability and overall application activity,” MBA president and CEO Bob Broeksmit said in a statement.

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    Nvidia expects $20 billion in revenue from sales of standalone CPUS and CPU servers: Nvidia CFO

    Nvidia (NVDA) expects $20 billion in revenue this year from the sale of both standalone CPUs and CPU servers, CFO Colette Kress told Yahoo Finance on Thursday, providing clarity on a number that caught attention on Wall Street during the company’s earnings call on Wednesday.

    Yahoo Finance’s Dan Howley reports:

    On Thursday, CFO Colette Kress told Yahoo Finance that the company expects to see $20 billion in revenue from the sale of both standalone CPU (central processing unit) servers and CPUs, including in Nvidia’s Grace Blackwell and Vera Rubin superchips.

    “We now have an opportunity to also have what we call a standalone CPU, and selling that,” Kress said during an interview with Yahoo Finance.

    “We have customers already looking at the opportunity…along with our Vera Rubin and Grace Blackwell together. That together, we believe, for this year, can be a total of $20 billion of CPUs,” she added.

    Kress’ comments add clarity to CEO Jensen Huang’s statement during the company’s earnings call, noting that standalone CPU sales would bring in $20 billion.

    All totaled, Huang said the CPU market represents a $200 billion opportunity for Nvidia.

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    AI may increase jobs instead of replacing them: LPL Financial

    While fears of mass displacement by artificial intelligence have wracked the labor market in recent months, the technology may actually do the opposite, increasing jobs instead of replacing them, LPL Financial chief economist Jeffrey Roach said.

    Roach cited the Jevons paradox, the idea that when technology makes the use of a given resource more efficient, demand can rise rather than fall because lower costs open up more use cases and wider adoption.

    “AI may reduce the time and cost required to perform many tasks, but that does not necessarily imply a proportional decline in labor demand,” Roach said.

    “Instead, by making tasks, software development, customer service, research, and operations more productive, AI can expand the volume of work organizations are able to undertake and create demand for new roles, new products, and new business models.”

    Instead of mass replacement, Roach said, AI is likely to reallocate tasks instead of displacing humans. He cites medical diagnostic imaging centers as one example, where, instead of displacing workers, the lower cost of service has expanded demand and led to more hiring at such firms.

    Roach also said that AI could fill the gap left in the labor market by an aging population, as more people move into retirement, shrinking the pool of available labor. Working-age people are expected to make up around 62% of the total population by 2050, and less than 60% by 2070, per LPL data.

    In that scenario, Roach said, AI is “viewed as a way to fill that gap by boosting how much each worker can produce rather than relying on a larger workforce.”

  • Jake Conley

    Oil prices spike after Iranian supreme leader says regime’s enriched uranium supply can’t leave country

    Oil prices spiked on Thursday after Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei issued a directive stating that the country’s supply of near-weapons-grade uranium can’t be removed from the country, complicating US-Iran negotiations.

    Futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, rose by as much as 3.5% to trade over $108.50 per barrel before paring gains, while those on US benchmark WTI crude (CL=F) gained as much as 4% to cross over $102 before pulling back slightly.

    Prices spiked Thursday morning after Reuters reported that the supreme leader had issued an edict saying the regime’s stores of uranium enriched to near-weapons grade levels should not be sent outside Iran. The development complicates negotiations between Iran and the US, where the White House has said the removal of Iran’s enriched uranium supply is a key red line for any deal.

    Trump has repeatedly stated his belief that Iran can’t develop nuclear weaponry and that the US must dismantle the country’s enrichment program for any deal to go through. He has reportedly personally assured Israeli leaders that any deal must include the removal of the uranium stores, per Reuters.

    Read more here.

  • Bond markets are not so subtly telling the Fed that rates aren’t high enough

    Bond yields resumed their climb higher on Thursday after a reprieve on Wednesday, signaling to the Federal Reserve that interest rates aren’t high enough.

    Yahoo Finance’s Jennifer Schonberger reports:

    The 2-year Treasury yield, a leading indicator of the Fed’s interest rate policy, has risen to 4.1%, well above the upper end of the Fed’s target range of 3.50%-3.75%. At the same time, the yield on the 10-year Treasury (^TNX) — a warning about investors’ inflation expectations — nearly touched 4.7% before backing off on Wednesday.

    “The Bond Vigilantes are threatening that if the Fed doesn’t tighten credit conditions, they will do so to maintain law and order in the economy,” Ed Yardeni wrote this week in a research note.

    The rise in bond yields comes as the latest data shows inflation heating up amid the war in Iran, while other economic data suggests resilience in the face of higher oil prices.

    Read more here.

  • Jake Conley

    US stock market turns down at the opening bell

    The US stock market opened into the red on Thursday after Iran’s supreme leader said the country’s near-weapons-grade uranium can’t leave the country, sparking renewed unease around potential peace deals.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI), benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC), and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) all fell roughly 0.5%.

    In the oil market, futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, rose roughly 2% to trade over $107 per barrel, while those on US benchmark WTI crude (CL=F) gained 2.8% to cross back over $100, after the supreme leader’s comments.

    Nvidia’s (NVDA) earnings remained in focus after publishing Wednesday evening, beating expectations on the top and bottom lines.

    Elsewhere in the corporate world, Walmart (WMT) reported above estimates on revenue and earnings per share on Thursday. Ross Stores (ROST), Workday (WDAY), and Zoom Communications (ZM) will also report earnings on Thursday.

  • Jake Conley

    Stellantis announces turnaround that will elevate Jeep and Ram, while pulling back on Chrysler and Dodge

    Carmaker Stellantis NV (STLA) is launching a turnaround plan that will elevate four core brands while sidelining others like Chrysler, the company announced Thursday morning.

    Moving forward, Stellantis will concentrate its investments on Jeep, Ram, Peugeot, and Fiat. The company said it believes the move will raise returns by as much as 10% in North America and as much as 5% in Europe by 2030.

    Those returns would compare to a 2.5% return on the previous quarter.

    The company will invest roughly $70 billion through 2030, with roughly 70% of that spending expected to go to Jeep, Ram, Peugeot, and Fiat, Bloomberg reported, while investments in Chrysler, Dodge, and other brands will be pared back.

    The restructuring plans come after news on Tuesday that Stellantis (STLA) and Jaguar Land Rover struck a nonbinding agreement to explore shared product and technology development in the US, the latest in a string of cross-brand partnerships reshaping the global auto industry as sharing costs becomes the name of the game.

    The two companies signed a memorandum of understanding committing them to exploring collaboration across product design and technology, though neither side has announced specific programs or financial terms.

  • Jake Conley

    Initial jobless claims fall to 209,000, below expectations

    Initial jobless claims rose to 209,000 in the week ended May 16, according to data released by the Department of Labor on Thursday, coming in above the previous week’s revised tally of 212,000 first-time claims.

    Economists had expected initial claims to be slightly higher at 210,000 for the week, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The four-week moving average of initial claims fell to 202,500 from 204,000 the week prior.

    Continuing claims, which track the unemployed population still seeking work, rose to roughly 1.782 million in the week ended May 9 from the prior week’s revised count of roughly 1.776 million.

    Economists had been looking for roughly 1.79 million continuing claims.

  • Quantum computing stocks jump on a report that the US will grant $2 billion in awards, take equity stakes

    The Trump administration is reportedly working on deals with nine quantum-computing companies, where the US will award $2 billion in grants in exchange for equity stakes, ‌according to the Wall Street Journal.

    According to the report, the Commerce Department will give IBM (IBM) a $1 billion package, while GlobalFoundries (GFS) will receive $375 million. D-Wave Quantum (QBTS), Rigetti Computing (RGTI) and Infleqtion (INFQ) ‌will receive $100 ⁠million each, the report said, while Diraq could receive $38 million.

    The news sent shares of the companies listed much higher in premarket trading on Thursday. IBM stock jumped 6%, while GlobalFoundries stock leaped 15% higher. Shares of D-Wave rose more than 16% and Rigetti stock gained 14%.

    Quantum computing uses quantum mechanics to solve complex computational problems, promising to process data exponentially faster than traditional computers. But it’s still a relatively nascent industry that’s finding its way from research labs to commercial applications.

    Read more here.

  • Walmart Q1 earnings meet expectations as e-commerce sales surge

    Walmart (WMT) stock fell 2% in premarket trading after reporting first quarter results that were in line with Wall Street’s expectations but a second quarter outlook that came in a bit light.

    Yahoo Finance’s Brooke Dipalma reports on the quarter:

    In the first quarter, the big box retailer posted same-store sales growth of 4.1% in the US, above the 3.85% growth Wall Street analysts expected, according to Bloomberg consensus estimates. Higher foot traffic, ticket sizes, and 26% growth in e-commerce sales drove results.

    Revenue grew 7.3% to $177.8 billion, more than the $174.8 billion the Street anticipated. Walmart reported adjusted earnings of $0.66, in line with estimates. Both metrics were above the forecast Walmart shared in the prior quarter.

    The company gained share across all categories again, including grocery, health and wellness, and merchandise and income cohorts, led by high-income shoppers.

    Read more here.

  • Oil pulls up following plunge over US-Iran back-and-forth

    Bloomberg reports:

    Oil inched higher after plummeting on Wednesday, as President Donald Trump said the US is in the “final stages” with Iran.

    Brent (BZ=F) neared $106 a barrel after sliding 5.6% on Wednesday, while West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) was around $99. Trump’s comments to reporters stoked hopes for a deal between Washington and Tehran that would see a near-term restart of energy flows through the critical Strait of Hormuz.

    Conflicting headlines about the status of negotiations have buffeted oil this week, and prices are still more than 40% higher than when the war started at the end of February. Still, traders have consistently priced in the possibility of an abrupt deescalation, including a deal under which Iran reopens the key shipping lane and unlocks millions of barrels stuck in the Persian Gulf.

    Even if the Iran conflict ended immediately, Middle East oil flows would not fully recover until well into 2027, Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. Chief Executive Officer Sultan Al Jaber said Wednesday. The Strait of Hormuz closure was the most severe supply disruption on record, he said.

    Read more here.

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