- Futures point to a sharp bounce — S&P +1.55%, Nasdaq +2.36% — after Wednesday's broad sell-off
- Commodities crushed across the board: gold -2.16%, silver -4.69%, oil -2.88% as the dollar surges
- Last full session before Juneteenth — Friday markets closed, expect 3-day weekend positioning
Previous Session Close
Wednesday delivered a broad, even drawdown. The S&P 500 dropped 1.25%, the Nasdaq 100 fell 1.01%, and the Russell 2000 shed 0.75%. The Dow gave back just under 1%. Every sector closed red — consumer discretionary took the hardest hit at -2.51%, while industrials held up best at just -0.14%.
The VIX printed 17.32, but what stands out is the direction: it actually fell 6.07% on the session despite the sell-off. That divergence — equities down but implied volatility declining — suggests the market treated Wednesday’s move as an orderly de-risk rather than panic. The VIX sitting well below 20 says institutional hedging demand has not spiked.
Overnight Futures & Global Read
Futures are pricing a clean reversal. S&P futures are up 1.55% to 7,540, Nasdaq futures are leading at +2.36%, and the Russell 2000 is bouncing 1.72%. The breadth of the recovery matters — this is not a narrow mega-cap bid. All four contracts are green, with small-caps participating, which typically signals genuine risk appetite rather than defensive rotation into quality.
The overnight tone lines up with headlines around the new Warsh-led Fed era and what Morgan Stanley flagged as a potential policy surprise. Markets are leaning into the idea that the transition brings a more market-sensitive Fed chair.
Commodity & FX Setup
Commodities are getting hit hard. Gold dropped 2.16% to $4,265 and silver collapsed 4.69% — a clear unwind of safe-haven positioning that fits the risk-on futures bounce. When gold sells off alongside equities recovering, it confirms the rotation is toward growth, not defense.
Oil fell 2.88% to $74.58, which takes pressure off the energy inflation narrative. Gasoline just dipped below $4 per gallon for the first time in this cycle — a consumer tailwind and a headwind for XLE, already down 1.25% on the session. Copper lost 1.63%, softening the industrial growth read slightly.
The dollar index pushed up 0.70% to 100.8, with EUR/USD down 1.23% and cable dropping 1.53%. A stronger dollar typically pressures multinational earnings, but the magnitude here is modest enough that it reads more as a safe-haven unwind into USD than a tightening impulse.
Catalyst Watch
The Fed transition dominates. Headlines are calling the Warsh era kickoff a “big surprise no one saw coming,” while Morgan Stanley warns markets may regret expecting a more accommodative stance. How traders interpret early Warsh signals will set the tone for rate expectations through the summer.
Intel rallied on reports that Trump confirmed the company will build chips for Apple domestically. That is a direct read-through to semiconductor capex and reshoring themes — watch SMH and the broader chip complex for follow-through at the open.
This is the last full session before Juneteenth on Friday. Three-day weekends compress positioning — expect lighter volume into the afternoon and potential hedging in the final hour as traders reduce exposure ahead of the long weekend.
Bottom Line
The setup into Thursday leans risk-on. Futures are pricing a full reversal of Wednesday’s losses, the VIX is not confirming fear, and the commodity flush suggests money is rotating back toward equities. The level to watch is whether the S&P can reclaim and hold above 7,500 on cash open — that was approximate support before Wednesday’s drop. The single biggest driver is how markets digest the early Warsh Fed posture: if the “big surprise” reads as dovish, this bounce has legs into the weekend.
Read next: Market Pulse · VIX Term Structure · What Is a Bond?
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