- April core PCE ran hot just as Powell exited the Fed — yet S&P 500 closed at another record (+0.58%) and Nasdaq added +0.91%, keeping one of the strongest 8-week runs in years intact.
- Snowflake (SNOW) ripped +36% on an AWS deal and upbeat forecast, dragging Palantir (PLTR) +8% with it — the AI-infrastructure trade is shrugging off every macro warning.
- The 10-year yield slipped 2bp to 4.46% and VIX collapsed to 15.74 — markets are openly betting that hawkish Fed talk is bluff and the rate-cut path stays intact.
Hot April core PCE. A new Fed Chair walking in. Hawkish officials lining up at the microphones. The S&P 500 closed at another record. Then Snowflake ripped 36% after-hours. The disconnect between what the data is saying and what the tape is doing is now the loudest signal in the market — and Friday is when that gets stress-tested. The bond market is the one venue where someone actually has to put money on which side is right, and right now it is quietly nodding along with the equity rally despite a hot inflation print that nobody is supposed to want.
What moved overnight
The S&P 500 closed Thursday at 7,563.63 (+0.58%), another record. The Nasdaq added +0.91% to 26,917, the Dow scraped out +0.05%, and the Russell 2000 joined the party at +0.57% — breadth, not just a Mag-7 squeeze. The 10-year yield slipped to 4.46% (down 2bp), the 30-year eased to 4.99%, and the VIX collapsed to 15.74, its lowest weekly close in months.
The single-name story was Snowflake (SNOW), up +36.5% on an expanded AWS partnership and an upbeat forecast that rewrote the AI-infrastructure narrative in one print. Palantir (PLTR) sympathy-traded to +8.2%. Super Micro added +9.5%. On the other side, Photronics (PLAB) cratered -36% on guidance, a reminder that “AI infra” is not a monolithic trade — semicap and photomask names are getting picked off individually even as the platform layer rips. Bitcoin slipped to ~$73,500 and the dollar drifted lower (DXY 99.02), both fitting the rate-cut-path story.
Trending in markets right now
Social conversations are circling three tensions at once. The first is the Powell handover — investors online are debating whether the seven words on his way out the door were a parting hawkish warning or a procedural footnote, and the answer materially changes how seriously to take the chorus of hawkish Fed-official soundbites that landed within hours of his exit. The second is the Anthropic round at a $965B valuation, which leapfrogged OpenAI and reignited the “private AI capital cycle is the actual driver of public AI multiples” debate that our five-name Asia AI concentration breakdown opened earlier this week.
The third is the bond-market alarm framing making the rounds — long-dated yields holding above 4.9% while equities print records is the setup that historically resolves through either a yield mean-revert or an equity correction. Retail chatter is fixated on which one breaks first. Google search interest is surging in “core PCE 2026” and “Anthropic valuation” — both consistent with an audience trying to reconcile a hot data print with euphoric price action. For the price-action layer, see Thursday’s biggest movers by market cap; for the live trending board, the trending page is rotating.
Three things to watch today
The 10-year Treasury auction window. If yields stay anchored at 4.46% or lower into Friday’s close despite Thursday’s hot PCE, that is the bond market telling the hawkish Fed chorus to take a number. A sharp move back toward 4.55% would flip the read.
Snowflake’s gap-up follow-through. Single-day +36% moves on earnings either consolidate above the gap or get sold into the second session. Whichever way SNOW resolves Friday is the broader read on whether the AI-infrastructure trade has another leg or just had its blow-off top.
Month-end rebalancing flows. Friday is the final trading day of a month in which the S&P 500 has run hard. Pension and target-date rebalancing typically sells what worked into month-end — if that flow shows up in the afternoon and the tape still closes green, that is a quiet bullish signal for June.
Bottom line
The macro data is saying slow down. The Powell exit and the hawkish chorus are saying don’t price in cuts. The S&P, the VIX, and the 10-year are saying watch us anyway. Until one of those three breaks, the working posture is: respect the trend, but watch what bonds do — not what Fed speakers say. The data point that resolves the open question is whether the 10-year reclaims 4.50% on a session where equities also sell off. That is the day the two sides finally meet. Friday is not that day yet — but the setup is sitting right there.
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