- US equities surged in May — SPY gained 5.3% and QQQ jumped 10.6% as Strait of Hormuz ceasefire optimism, a US-China trade deal, and NVIDIA's record earnings converged into a broad risk-on rally
- Technology led all sectors at +19.8% while oil collapsed 16.9% on OPEC+ supply increases and growing expectations of a Hormuz reopening — the widest tech-energy divergence in years
- June's calendar is front-loaded with catalysts: May jobs data on June 5, CPI on June 10, an ECB rate decision on June 11, and the FOMC dot plot on June 17 — all compressed into two weeks
The month in US markets
May 2026 delivered one of the year’s strongest monthly rallies across US equities. SPY closed the month at $756.50, up 5.3%, while QQQ surged 10.6% to $738.30 as mega-cap tech reasserted dominance. IWM gained 4.5% to $290.40 and DIA added 2.9% to $510.80 — a broad advance, but one clearly led by growth over value. The VIX fell 9.3% to 15.32, confirming the shift in sentiment from hedging to chasing.
The dominant theme was de-escalation. Three separate risk overhangs — the Strait of Hormuz standoff, US-China trade friction, and the AI capex validation question — all moved in the same direction within the same month. That kind of triple tailwind is rare, and it showed up most clearly in the Nasdaq’s double-digit run.
Winners and losers
Technology was the undisputed winner. XLK gained 19.8% in a single month — nearly four times the S&P 500’s advance. NVIDIA’s first-quarter results ($81.6 billion in revenue, up 85% year-over-year, with $91 billion guided for next quarter) validated the hyperscaler capex cycle and pulled the entire semiconductor supply chain higher. The AI infrastructure trade broadened: HPE surged on networking demand, Micron rallied past $1,000 on DRAM shortage projections extending into 2028, and Applied Materials drew fresh institutional interest as a picks-and-shovels beneficiary.
Healthcare added 2.4% (XLV to $149.50) and Consumer Discretionary gained 2.1% (XLY to $120.90) — decent but dwarfed by tech’s move. Copper climbed 7.3% to $6.359, tracking the industrial-recovery side of the same de-escalation thesis.
The losers told the mirror story. WTI crude collapsed 16.9% to $87.36 as ceasefire optimism repriced the Hormuz risk premium, and XLE fell 5.6% to $56.29 in sympathy. Financials slipped 1.1% (XLF to $51.58), Industrials lost 0.8% (XLI to $173.10), and Materials edged down 0.6% (XLB to $51.15). Gold gave back 1.2% to $4,560 — the haven bid faded as equities absorbed the de-escalation narrative. The 10-year Treasury yield ticked up to 4.453% (+1.4%), consistent with a market rotating out of safety and into risk.
What drove May 2026
Three catalysts converged. First, the Strait of Hormuz ceasefire talks made material progress — the US and Iran moved toward a 60-day MOU, and the growing expectation that shipping lanes would eventually reopen unwound the crude oil spike that had defined early 2026. OPEC+ accelerated the shift by announcing a 188,000 barrel-per-day production increase starting in June. That combination sent Brent crude to its worst monthly decline since the pandemic.
Second, the Trump-Xi summit in mid-May produced tangible deliverables: $17 billion per year in Chinese agricultural purchases through 2028, a 200-aircraft Boeing order, and commitments on rare earth supply — enough to take the worst-case tariff escalation scenario off the table for now.
Third, NVIDIA’s earnings removed any lingering doubt about AI demand durability. Data center revenue hit $75.2 billion (up 92% year-over-year), and the forward guide to $91 billion gave institutional allocators the conviction to add. The Fed, meanwhile, stayed on the sideline — no May meeting, and the April hold at 3.50–3.75% left rates unchanged. May 20 FOMC minutes did flag a possible hike if inflation persisted, but the market treated that as a distant conditional, not an imminent threat.
June 2026 outlook
The setup heading into June is risk-on with elevated concentration risk. QQQ’s 10.6% monthly gain was nearly entirely driven by a handful of AI names, and the breadth gap between tech (+19.8%) and the rest of the market (most sectors flat to negative) is something that historically compresses — the question is whether tech pulls back or the laggards catch up.
The June calendar is dense. May nonfarm payrolls land on June 5 — the April print of 115,000 jobs at 4.3% unemployment was steady but not hot, and any material deviation will reprice the Fed path. May CPI follows on June 10 (April’s 3.8% headline remains well above the Fed’s target). Oracle and Adobe report on June 10 and 11 respectively — both are cloud and AI bellwethers that will test whether the NVIDIA-led rally has follow-through beyond silicon.
The week of June 15 is the highest-density cluster of the month. The ECB is expected to hike 25 basis points on June 11, the Bank of Japan is priced at 87% odds of a 25bp hike on June 15–16, and the FOMC meets June 16–17 with an overwhelming consensus for a hold — but this is a Summary of Economic Projections meeting, so the updated dot plot will matter more than the rate decision itself. The G7 summit runs concurrently in Evian. Triple witching moves to Thursday June 18 because Juneteenth closes markets on Friday the 19th — expect volume compression into that Thursday.
What we’re watching
The FOMC dot plot (June 17). The rate decision is a foregone hold. The dots are the event — any shift in the median 2026 path from the current 3.50–3.75% will reprice the entire curve. Watch the dissent count: April’s 8-4 split was the most fractured since 1992.
May CPI (June 10). April’s 3.8% headline was too hot for dovish comfort. A second consecutive print in that range would harden the “hike ahead” language from the May 20 minutes.
Tech breadth. XLK gained 19.8% in May. The rest of the market averaged roughly flat. June will reveal whether this was the start of a broadening rally or the final stage of a narrow one.
Oil and the Hormuz timeline. WTI at $87.36 has already priced in substantial ceasefire progress. Any breakdown in negotiations — or a confirmed reopening — moves energy and the entire inflation outlook.
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