Dow Jones Hits Weekly Record as Bond Yields and Oil Prices Ease

Easing pressure in the bond market and a weekly decline in oil prices helped lift U.S. equities on Friday, while investors continued to monitor developments in the Middle East and signals from the Federal Reserve.

The Dow jumped on Friday.
The Dow jumped on Friday.

U.S. stocks advanced on May 22, capping a positive week as Treasury yields retreated and energy prices moderated. Markets navigated a volatile stretch shaped by diplomatic developments in the Middle East and earnings reports from major corporations, including NVIDIA (-2%) and Walmart (-0.7%).

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.58% to 50,579.70, setting a new weekly closing record. The S&P 500 gained 0.36% to 7,472.73, while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.19% to close at 26,343.97.

[[SPX-graph]]

A Week Defined by Bond and Oil Volatility

U.S. equities began the week under pressure as a sharp selloff in global bond markets pushed benchmark yields to multi-year highs.

The yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury climbed to its highest level in more than a year, while the 30-year Treasury yield reached levels not seen since 2007. The bond selloff reflected growing expectations that major central banks may need to raise interest rates further to contain inflationary pressures fueled by higher energy prices amid the conflict involving Iran.

At the same time, minutes from the Federal Reserve’s April meeting showed that most policymakers believe additional rate hikes could be necessary if inflationary pressures linked to the energy sector persist. Markets are now fully pricing in a 25-basis-point rate increase from the Fed before year-end.

Some analysts argue that monetary policy may already be leaning too aggressively toward guarding against labor-market weakness, even as inflation risks remain elevated.

Diplomatic Signals Improve Market Sentiment

Investor sentiment improved during the second half of the week as bond-market volatility eased and oil prices retreated from recent highs.

Diplomatic developments between the United States and Iran also supported risk assets. Iran’s foreign minister held talks with Pakistani officials, with Pakistan once again acting as a mediator between Washington and Tehran.

According to Iranian media reports and Reuters, negotiations are focused on narrowing differences surrounding proposed peace arrangements. U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio said there were “encouraging signs” of progress but cautioned against excessive optimism.

Despite easing concerns, Brent crude still rose 1.5% on Friday to $104.11 per barrel, although it finished the week down nearly 5%.

U.S. Consumer Sentiment Falls to Record Low

Another key market development was the release of the latest consumer sentiment survey from the University of Michigan.

The index fell to 44.8 in May from 49.8 in April, marking the lowest reading on record.

“Consumer sentiment declined for a third consecutive month as supply disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz continue to push gasoline prices higher,” said Joanne Hsu, director of the university’s Surveys of Consumers.

The survey also showed that 57% of respondents reported that elevated prices were negatively affecting their personal finances, up from 50% the previous month.

Meanwhile, one-year inflation expectations edged up to 4.8% in May from 4.7% in April, while long-term inflation expectations climbed to 3.9%, remaining well above levels typically considered consistent with price stability.

Mexican Peso Weakens Against the Dollar but Posts Weekly Gain

The Mexican peso lost ground against the U.S. dollar on Friday as investors awaited developments in U.S.-Iran peace negotiations while digesting a fresh batch of domestic economic data.

The exchange rate closed at 17.3198 pesos per dollar, compared with 17.2963 in the previous session, according to official figures from Bank of Mexico. The move represented a decline of 2.35 centavos, or 0.14%, for the Mexican currency.

During the session, the dollar traded within a range of 17.2886 to 17.3500 pesos. Meanwhile, the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, edged up 0.04% to 99.30.

[[USD/MXN-graph]]

Markets remained focused on diplomatic efforts between the United States and Iran. With mediation from Pakistan, both sides reportedly moved closer to a potential agreement to end hostilities, although disagreements over Iran’s uranium stockpiles and control of shipping through the Strait of Hormuz continued to prevent a final deal.

Mixed Domestic Economic Signals

At home, investors assessed revised economic figures showing that Mexico’s economy contracted less than previously estimated during the first quarter.

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) declined 0.6% quarter-over-quarter compared with the October–December period, while annual growth came in at just 0.2%, highlighting the economy’s ongoing slowdown.

Inflation data offered a more encouraging signal. Consumer prices moderated more than expected during the first half of May, although inflation remained above the central bank’s target range. The consumer price index rose 0.16% during the period, bringing annual inflation to 4.11%.

The latest economic data arrived shortly after Moody’s Ratings downgraded Mexico’s sovereign credit rating to Baa3, the lowest level within investment grade. The move followed a decision by S&P Global Ratings last week to revise the outlook on Mexico’s BBB rating to negative.

Weekly Performance Remains Positive

Despite Friday’s decline, the peso still posted a modest gain for the week.

Compared with last Friday’s close of 17.3428 pesos per dollar, the Mexican currency appreciated by 2.30 centavos, or 0.13%, reflecting resilience despite ongoing global uncertainty and concerns about domestic economic growth.

Bitcoin Struggles to Regain Momentum, Consolidates Around $77,000

Bitcoin (BTC) traded slightly higher on Thursday, up 0.3% at around $76,500, but remains on track to close the week with a 4% decline, according to Binance data.

The move comes amid renewed pressure from leveraged liquidations, geopolitical uncertainty, and rising U.S. Treasury yields, all of which have weakened risk appetite across crypto markets.

The broader crypto market showed mixed performance. Ether (ETH) rose 0.7% to $2,129, while XRP slipped 0.2% to $1.366. Solana (SOL) gained 2.1%, and both Cardano (ADA) and Polygon (POL) advanced around 1%. Dogecoin (DOGE) traded flat.

From a technical perspective, the $76,800 level is seen as critical support. A breakdown below this zone could accelerate losses toward $74,000 or even $71,000 in a more risk-off scenario. On the upside, Bitcoin faces key resistance between $78,900 and $81,700. A sustained breakout above that range could open the door toward $84,000.

[[BTC/USD-graph]]

Middle East Tensions Continue to Weigh on Sentiment

Geopolitical uncertainty remains a key driver of market pressure. While officials from both sides of the negotiations have pointed to “some positive signals” in talks aimed at de-escalating tensions, core disagreements remain unresolved.

Iran’s supreme leader reiterated that Tehran will not give up its enriched uranium stockpiles, while U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio rejected proposals involving tolls on ships passing through the Strait of Hormuz.

The renewed uncertainty contributed to a rebound in oil prices, reviving inflation concerns and dampening appetite for speculative assets. As a result, markets have scaled back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts this year, as higher energy prices threaten to keep inflation above the 2% target.

$200 Million in Liquidations Add Technical Pressure

Downside pressure intensified on the technical side as well. According to CoinGlass, roughly $200 million in leveraged crypto positions were liquidated over the past 24 hours, highlighting the elevated leverage built up during the recent rebound and the market’s vulnerability to sharp moves.

The crypto market is also being weighed down by continued outflows from spot Bitcoin ETFs — which recorded more than $1.1 billion in withdrawals between Monday and Thursday — alongside a more challenging macroeconomic backdrop.

Donald Trump to Swear In Kevin Warsh as New Federal Reserve Chair

Kevin Warsh will be sworn in as Chair of the Federal Reserve this Friday in a White House ceremony presided over by U.S. President Donald Trump.

He succeeds Jerome Powell at the helm of the world’s most influential central bank during one of the most inflationary periods in recent years.

Warsh’s confirmation was approved on May 13. He will serve a four-year term as Fed Chair and a 14-year term as a member of the Board of Governors. Powell, meanwhile, has confirmed that he will remain on the Board until January 2028.

The road to confirmation was far from smooth. Republican Senator Thom Tillis blocked Warsh’s nomination for several weeks in protest over a federal investigation into Powell and the Federal Reserve related to the cost overruns associated with renovations at the central bank’s Washington headquarters.

Just days before the Senate vote, a federal judge sharply criticized the case, prosecutors formally dropped the investigation in April, and Tillis lifted his hold, clearing the way for Warsh’s confirmation.

At the same time, Fed Governor Stephen Miran is expected to step down on or shortly before Warsh’s inauguration. Miran had temporarily filled a vacant seat while serving on leave from his position as Chair of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

Trump’s Choice for the Federal Reserve

Trump selected Warsh largely because of his support for lower interest rates.

The incoming Fed Chair has repeatedly argued in favor of cutting rates while simultaneously shrinking the central bank’s balance sheet, a policy combination that many economists view with skepticism.

However, Warsh appears to be entering office in the minority relative to many of the policymakers he will oversee.

Minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s April 28–29 meeting, released Wednesday, showed that most officials believed that “some further tightening of monetary policy would likely be appropriate” if inflation remains persistently above the Fed’s 2% target.

The Trump administration’s approach toward the Federal Reserve has also sparked debate. White House officials have openly suggested that the central bank should align more closely with the president’s fiscal agenda and operate with less independence.

During his confirmation hearings, Warsh echoed parts of that rhetoric but maintained that he would preserve the institution’s operational independence once in office.

Elon Musk Could Earn Massive Bonus if SpaceX Colonizes Mars

SpaceX disclosed that Elon Musk will only be eligible for extraordinary bonus compensation if he succeeds in sending one million people to Mars and meets unprecedented valuation milestones.

SpaceX will be going public.
SpaceX will be going public.

The company revealed one of the most striking clauses in its highly anticipated initial public offering (IPO): Musk would only unlock a massive incentive package if he achieves one of his most ambitious long-term goals — establishing a self-sustaining settlement of one million people on Mars.

The condition is outlined in the prospectus filed on Wednesday with U.S. regulators as part of SpaceX’s IPO process. The company is expected to list on the Nasdaq under the ticker “SPCX”.

The compensation structure directly links Musk’s future wealth to the Mars colonization project he has championed for years, which he has repeatedly described as essential for the long-term survival of humanity.

Bonus tied to SpaceX valuation and Mars milestones

According to the filing, Musk’s extraordinary bonus is subject to two core conditions.

The first is that SpaceX must reach valuation thresholds ranging from $400 billion to as much as $6 trillion.

The second requirement is even more ambitious: the company must successfully transport and establish one million people on Mars.

The structure reportedly surprised Wall Street due to its scale and the nature of its targets, which are closer to science fiction than traditional corporate compensation frameworks.

Musk’s potential net worth surge

Beyond the performance-linked bonus, the IPO itself could already position Musk as the wealthiest individual in modern history.

At a projected valuation of around $1.75 trillion for the offering, Musk’s current stake in SpaceX would be worth an estimated $735 billion.

This valuation would be reached even before any meaningful progress toward Mars colonization is achieved.

SpaceX is also shaping up to be one of the largest IPOs ever launched on Wall Street.

The second target: orbital data centers

The prospectus also outlines a second extraordinary compensation package tied to another frontier technology goal.

Under this scenario, Musk could receive 60 million additional shares if SpaceX succeeds in building orbital data centers capable of delivering 100 terawatts of computing capacity per year.

This figure would far exceed the scale of any existing computing infrastructure on Earth.

The initiative is closely linked to the rapid expansion of artificial intelligence and the surging global demand for energy and computational power.

Value Stocks Have Soared 3,500% Over the Past Two Decades

These stocks doubled the performance of the S&P 500 between January and April, posting a 12.1% gain over that period, as investors increasingly seek assets less exposed to technology-driven volatility.

Wall Street operators are ready for the earnings season.
Wall Street operators are ready for the earnings season.

Value stocks are regaining traction on Wall Street, supported by strong corporate balance sheets, improving earnings growth, and more reasonable valuations compared with other segments of the market. In an environment where investors are looking for safer alternatives to high-flying tech names, several strategists argue that fundamentally solid companies could continue delivering attractive returns in 2026.

According to Bloomberg Intelligence, a value-focused portfolio has returned 3,471% since 2000, significantly outperforming the S&P 500 over the same period, by more than a fourfold margin.

The strategy has also beaten the benchmark by more than two times so far this year through April, with a 12.1% advance during that span.

Wall Street Turns Back to Value

The appeal of value stocks lies in their lower valuation multiples combined with steady improvements in financial performance.

This renewed interest comes amid a strong corporate earnings cycle in the United States, with S&P 500 companies expected to post their fastest profit growth in more than four years in 2026. The expansion is being driven by investments in artificial intelligence, operational efficiency, and a still-resilient economy despite geopolitical tensions and inflationary pressures.

Valuations have also moderated even as equity indexes reach record highs. The S&P 500 price-to-earnings ratio has declined from above 25x to around 21x, supported by stronger earnings growth. In the technology sector, the adjustment has been even more pronounced, with average multiples falling from 36x to roughly 25x.

Focus on Financials and Industrials

Within the value universe, analysts are increasingly focusing on financial and industrial companies showing both earnings strength and strong market performance.

Names such as Axos Financial and Esquire Financial Holdings have improved their “relative strength” metrics, a measure used to compare stock performance against the broader market. Both companies have also reported accelerating earnings and revenue growth in recent quarters.

Meanwhile, major investment banks remain constructive on U.S. equities. Morgan Stanley recently raised its S&P 500 target, citing strong corporate earnings and the productivity boost driven by artificial intelligence.

However, risks remain. A “higher-for-longer” interest rate environment, persistent inflation, or a slowdown in AI-related spending could dampen market enthusiasm. For now, though, the combination of solid earnings and more balanced valuations continues to support demand for value stocks.

Nvidia Raises Dividend by 2,400%: How the Big Tech Dividend Rankings Stand

NVIDIA, the world’s most valuable publicly traded company, delivered another strong earnings report and shattered multiple records.

Nvidia's earnings report is sure to move the stock market.
Nvidia’s earnings report is sure to move the stock market.

Yet one of the biggest surprises for investors was its decision to increase its dividend by 2,400%, making the chipmaker far more competitive with other major technology companies in terms of shareholder payouts.

[[NVDA/USD-graph]]

The company’s board approved an increase in the quarterly dividend from $0.01 per share to $0.25 per share. The payment will be made on June 26, 2026, to shareholders of record as of June 4.

As a result, Nvidia now offers an annual dividend yield of approximately 0.45%, placing it in line with several large-cap technology peers such as Microsoft and Alphabet.

The Top Dividend-Paying Technology Giants

According to data compiled by Finviz, the ranking of major technology companies by annual dividend yield now looks as follows:

Broadcom Leads the Group

Broadcom tops the list with a dividend yield of 0.95%. The company has become one of the key beneficiaries of the artificial intelligence boom thanks to its data center chips and infrastructure solutions.

Close behind is Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company (TSMC), also offering a yield of 0.95%. The company remains one of the few high-growth semiconductor leaders that also provides a meaningful cash return to shareholders.

Microsoft Combines Growth and Income

Microsoft ranks next with a dividend yield of 0.88%, reflecting the financial maturity of one of the world’s largest technology companies.

The software giant continues to balance dividend distributions and share repurchases while aggressively expanding its cloud computing and artificial intelligence businesses.

Apple, Meta, and Alphabet Offer More Modest Yields

Apple currently offers a dividend yield of 0.36%, relatively modest despite its enormous cash generation. Apple has historically prioritized large-scale share buybacks over aggressive dividend increases.

Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, provides a yield of 0.33%. The dividend is a recent addition to Meta’s capital allocation strategy and reflects a greater emphasis on returning cash to shareholders.

Alphabet offers a dividend yield of 0.22%. The Google parent company only recently initiated dividend payments after years of directing virtually all excess cash toward growth initiatives and technological development.

Companies That Pay Little—or Nothing

Further down the list is Micron Technology, with a dividend yield of just 0.08%.

Meanwhile, Amazon and Tesla do not currently pay dividends at all.

In both cases, management prefers to reinvest profits into expansion projects, acquisitions, and technological innovation, betting that long-term growth will generate greater value for shareholders than regular cash distributions.

Brazil Faces Sharp Foreign Capital Outflows

In addition to a challenging global backdrop, a series of recent political developments has prompted foreign investors to reassess their expectations ahead of Brazil’s presidential election.

Brazil’s budget doesn’t look good.

Brazil has experienced a significant wave of foreign capital outflows in recent weeks. The trend reflects not only deteriorating global market conditions but also the recent decline of right-wing candidate Flavio Bolsonaro in opinion polls. Analysts broadly agree that the phenomenon is unlikely to have an immediate impact on Argentina, although they caution that pressures on the Brazilian real could eventually spill over into regional currency markets.

According to data compiled by Delphos Investment, foreign investors withdrew 2.47 billion reais (approximately $492 million) from Brazilian markets on Friday alone.

“This was not an isolated event but rather the culmination of a sequence of 19 outflow sessions in the last 21 trading days, totaling more than 22 billion reais ($4.38 billion) over the past month and reversing more than 25% of the foreign inflows recorded earlier this year,” the firm noted.

As a result, Delphos estimates that May is on track to become the worst month of the year for offshore capital flows, following first-quarter inflows of nearly 54 billion reais ($10.76 billion), which had marked the strongest start to a year since 2022.

Global Factors Drive Risk Aversion

The selloff has a clear external component driven by rising risk aversion and higher long-term global interest rates.

U.S. Treasury yields — widely regarded as the benchmark for risk-free assets — have risen sharply amid expectations that global inflation could remain higher than previously anticipated due to the conflict in the Middle East. That leads investors to reduce exposure to emerging markets, resulting in capital outflows.

Polls Turn Against Bolsonaro

At the same time, domestic political developments have added to investor concerns.

According to Zabaleta, recent polling suggests that Flavio Bolsonaro has lost ground against incumbent President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva following allegations linking Bolsonaro to former banker Daniel Vorcaro, who is currently imprisoned on fraud-related charges.

Reports indicated that the senator allegedly held discussions with former Master Bank CEO Daniel Vorcaro regarding potential financing for a film about his father, former President Jair Bolsonaro.

The controversy has affected the electoral landscape. Between late 2025 and April of this year, Flavio Bolsonaro had narrowed the gap with Lula in hypothetical runoff scenarios, and Brazilian assets had increasingly reflected expectations of a more competitive race.

However, the latest AtlasIntel poll released this week — the first to fully incorporate the impact of the Master Bank controversy — showed Lula leading Bolsonaro by more than seven percentage points.

As a result, investors are now assigning a lower probability to a political shift in Brazil following the October election.

Even so, analysts emphasize that the electoral race remains in its early stages. Presidential candidates have yet to be formally confirmed, with final nominations expected in August ahead of the general election scheduled for October 4.

Wall Street Rallies Ahead of Nvidia Earnings as Oil Prices Pull Back

The key event of the day will be the release of quarterly results from NVIDIA, while sovereign bond markets show signs of easing after recent volatility.

Wall Street operators are ready for the earnings season.
Wall Street operators are ready for the earnings season.

Major U.S. stock indexes traded higher on Wednesday, led by technology shares, reversing the losses from the previous session. Investor attention is firmly focused on Nvidia’s earnings report, due after the close, from the world’s largest company by market capitalization.

In commodities, oil prices extended their decline but remained well above the $100 per barrel mark amid ongoing uncertainty over the Middle East conflict. Brent crude fell 6.2% to $105.30 per barrel, while U.S. WTI crude dropped 5.2% to $98.19 per barrel.

[[SPX-graph]]

Global Market Impact

Reports from Axios and The Times of Israel suggested progress on a draft memorandum in which Iran would agree to transfer its highly enriched uranium stockpile to a third country, refrain from operating underground nuclear facilities, and accept enhanced inspections by the IAEA.

Meanwhile, the bond market — which had experienced sharp volatility in recent sessions — saw yields ease across major government debt benchmarks, including U.S. Treasuries, as well as bonds in Japan, the United Kingdom, and Germany.

In Europe, equities rallied broadly, with the Euro Stoxx index rising 1.97%. Germany’s DAX gained 1.28%, while France’s CAC 40 added 1.79%. Outside the eurozone, the UK’s FTSE 100 advanced 0.99%.

[[DAX-graph]]

In Asia, sentiment was mixed. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng slipped 0.18% and Shanghai fell 0.32%, while South Korea’s Kospi dropped 2.70% and Japan’s Nikkei 225 closed 1.34% lower.

Wall Street Drivers

In this context, U.S. equities moved higher. The S&P 500 rose 0.91%, the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.35%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average advanced 1.12%.

Top gainers included Enphase (+14%), Super Micro Computer (+10%), and United Airlines Holdings (+10%). On the downside, Hasbro (-8%), Analog Devices (-5%), and Target (-5%) led declines.

The defining event of the session remains Nvidia’s quarterly earnings release after the closing bell. The report is seen as a key test for the artificial intelligence investment narrative, particularly in light of recent strategic developments involving CEO Jensen Huang’s engagement with policymakers in Beijing and Washington, and their potential implications for Nvidia’s China exposure.

China Seeks to Purchase 200 Boeing Aircraft and Extend Tariff Truce With the U.S.

Beijing confirmed the purchase following the summit between Chinese President Xi Jinping and U.S. President Donald Trump, which also produced commitments on agriculture and critical minerals aimed at stabilizing bilateral relations.

Boeing will provide China at least 200 planes.
Boeing will provide China at least 200 planes.

China announced on Wednesday that it will buy 200 aircraft from Boeing and said it will request an extension of the current trade truce with the United States, which is set to expire in November. The announcement comes as part of a broader set of agreements reached after the recent Trump–Xi summit.

China’s Ministry of Commerce confirmed the deal in an official statement, though it did not disclose the specific aircraft models involved. As part of the agreement, the United States will guarantee the supply of aircraft engine parts and components to Chinese buyers.

If completed, the order would mark the first major Chinese purchase from Boeing in nearly a decade, after the U.S. manufacturer was effectively sidelined from the world’s second-largest aviation market amid escalating trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.

However, the reported figure is significantly lower than comments made by Trump earlier this week, when he suggested that total purchases could reach as many as 750 aircraft powered by next-generation engines from GE Aerospace.

Tariff Truce Under Negotiation

China’s commerce ministry emphasized that U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods should not exceed the ceiling established under last year’s Kuala Lumpur understanding, which preceded the Trump–Xi meeting in South Korea that extended the truce by one year and included a temporary pause on China’s restrictions on rare earth exports and magnets.

On tariffs, both sides are reportedly aiming for reciprocal reductions worth $30 billion or more, according to the Xi administration.

However, Washington’s tone remains cautious. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent told Reuters that the Trump administration is “not in a hurry” to renew the critical minerals agreement, signaling further rounds of negotiations ahead.

Agriculture and Market Access

The White House said on Sunday that China has committed to purchasing at least $17 billion in U.S. agricultural products between 2026 and 2028, excluding a separate soybean agreement. Beijing has not confirmed the figure, but acknowledged “positive outcomes” in the agricultural sector and reciprocal market access arrangements.

Concretely, China will resume registration of eligible U.S. beef exporters and restart imports of certain American poultry products. In return, the United States has pledged to remove or reduce non-tariff barriers affecting Chinese agricultural exports, including dairy products.