News Bulletin
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Evening Edition
Economic Numbers:
|
Time |
Event |
Actual |
Forecast |
Previous |
|
Thursday, May 21, 2026 |
||||
|
8:30 |
Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index (May) |
-0.40 |
17.60 |
26.70 |
|
8:30 |
Initial Jobless Claims |
209K |
210K |
212K |
|
8:30 |
Housing Starts (MoM)
(Apr) |
-2.80% |
|
12.00% |
|
8:30 |
Continuing Jobless Claims |
1,782K |
1,790K |
1,776K |
|
8:30 |
Building Permits (MoM)
(Apr) |
5.80% |
|
-11.50% |
|
8:30 |
Jobless Claims 4-Week Avg. |
202.50K |
|
204.00K |
|
11:30 |
4-Week Bill Auction |
3.61% |
|
3.61% |
|
11:30 |
8-Week Bill Auction |
3.60% |
|
3.61% |
Indices
|
|
CLOSE |
50 DMA |
200 DMA |
|
DJIA |
50,285.66 |
48,168.51 |
47,574.46 |
|
NASDAQ |
26,293.10 |
23,846.21 |
23,061.13 |
|
S&P 500 |
7,445.72 |
6,970.13 |
6,803.20 |
Earnings Calendar:
(EPS: Earning Per Share / Rev: Revenue / Mkt Cap: market Capital/ BMO: Before Market Opening /AMC:
After Market Close)
|
COMPANY |
EPS Act |
EPS
Fore |
Rev
Act |
Rev
Fore |
Mkt Cap |
Time |
|
Walmart WMT:US |
0.66 |
0.66 |
177.8B |
174.46B |
$974.54B |
AM |
|
Deere & Company DE:US |
6.55 |
5.65 |
13.37B |
11.51B |
$140.32B |
AM |
|
Ross Stores ROST:US |
2.02 |
1.63 |
6B |
5.32B |
$73.32B |
PM |
|
Take Two Interactive Software TTWO:US |
|
0.56 |
|
1.55B |
$40.99B |
PM |
|
Workday WDAY:US |
2.66 |
2.52 |
2.54B |
2.52B |
$31.94B |
PM |
|
Copart CPRT:US |
|
0.42 |
|
1.2B |
$31.46B |
PM |
|
Zoom ZM:US |
|
1.42 |
|
1.22B |
$29.88B |
PM |
|
Ralph Lauren RL:US |
2.8 |
2.47 |
2B |
1.83B |
$23.46B |
AM |
|
Deckers Outdoor DECK:US |
|
0.82 |
|
1.1B |
$14.99B |
PM |
|
Williams Sonoma WSM:US |
1.93 |
1.84 |
1.81B |
1.79B |
$11.84B |
AM |
|
Advanced Drainage Systems WMS:US |
1.07 |
0.96 |
676.8M |
652M |
$10.62B |
AM |
|
Masimo MASI:US |
|
1.43 |
|
398.65M |
$9.46B |
AM |
|
Chart Industries GTLS:US |
|
2.47 |
|
1.12B |
$8.76B |
AM |
|
Aimco AIV:US |
|
|
|
|
$7.97B |
PM |
|
Advance Auto Parts AAP:US |
0.77 |
0.42 |
2.6B |
2.58B |
$4.17B |
AM |
|
Cavco Industries CVCO:US |
|
5.78 |
|
583.95M |
$3.94B |
PM |
|
HUB HUBG:US |
|
0.39 |
|
885.76M |
$2.51B |
PM |
|
Veris Residential CLI:US |
|
|
|
67.94M |
$1.76B |
PM |
|
Flowers Foods FLO:US |
|
0.27 |
|
1.58B |
$1.45B |
PM |
|
American Woodmark AMWD:US |
|
0.32 |
|
371.63M |
$526.6M |
PM |
Market News:
Wall Street on Thursday ended higher,
rebounding from earlier losses after a report that a final draft of a U.S.-Iran
peace agreement had been reached with the help of mediator Pakistan. Longer-end
Treasury yields and oil prices turned lower on the news.
Meanwhile, artificial intelligence chip
giant Nvidia saw a muted reaction to its quarterly
report, as strong earnings were offset by valuation jitters.
The benchmark S&P 500 index climbed
0.2% to close at 7,446.05 points, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite
advanced 0.1% to settle at 26,293.10 points. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial
Average added 0.3% to conclude at 50,285.66 points, notching its first record
close since early February.
Final peace deal draft reached
A final draft of a peace agreement
between Washington and Tehran has been reached with the mediation of Pakistan
and is expected to be announced within the next few hours, the Iranian Labour
News Agency (ILNA) reported, citing Saudi Arabian broadcaster Al Arabiya.
Key provisions of the agreement include
an immediate ceasefire on all fronts, guaranteed freedom of navigation in the
Gulf and the Strait of Hormuz, and the launch of negotiations on outstanding
issues within a week, ILNA said, citing Al Arabiya.
Oil prices quickly gave up gains after
the ILNA report and then turned lower. Brent crude futures, the global oil
benchmark, were last down 0.7% to $104.33 a barrel.
Hopes over a resolution to the Middle
East conflict had earlier taken a hit after Reuters reported that Iranian
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Mojtaba Khamenei
had issued a directive that the country’s almost weapons-grade uranium should
not be shipped abroad, citing two senior Iranian sources. The move hinted at a
hardening stance by Iran on what has been one of the key sticking points in
negotiations with the U.S., as President Donald Trump has repeatedly said Iran
cannot have a nuclear weapon.
Al Jazeera
said Tehran had denied the report about Khamenei’s
order, citing a senior Iranian official, who called it "propaganda by the
enemies of the deal." The White House also pushed back against the report,
describing it as false, Fox News said, citing a person directly involved in the
negotiations.
Trump on Wednesday said the U.S. was in
the "final stages" of a potential draft peace agreement with Iran,
although he raised the specter
of a re-escalation in hostilities, warning that "we’re going to do some
things that are a little bit nasty" should a deal not be reached. The
president on Monday had delayed a planned military hit on Iran at the request
of three Gulf leaders, later saying that he had been just an "hour
away" from the attack.
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio told
reporters on Thursday that "some progress" had been made on Iran.
"We’re dealing with a system that itself is a little fractured, the Iranian system. But, that
said, there’ll be a couple of visits. I believe the Pakistanis will be traveling to Tehran today, so hopefully that’ll advance
this further," Rubio said.
Iran this week moved to expand its
control over the critical Strait of Hormuz. The vital waterway through which a
fifth of the world’s oil and gas flows had been effectively shuttered by Iran
since the start of the Middle East conflict at the end of February, leading to
the biggest supply disruption in history.
Iran unveiled a new maritime regulatory
body called the Persian Gulf Strait Authority. The body on Wednesday expanded
the boundaries of what it called a "management supervision area" on
both sides of the Strait of Hormuz and said any ships wanting to transit the
chokepoint would need coordination and a permit from an entity known as the
Persian Gulf Waterway Management.
Bond sell-off eases, economic data comes
in fairly solid
A renewed climb in Treasury yields
earlier also put pressure on U.S. stocks, as traders sold off government debt
on concerns that central banks across the world would hike interest rates in
order to combat the inflationary shock emerging from surging oil prices.
Following the ILNA report, yields
quickly ate into their advance. Longer-end instruments in particular then
turned lower. The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield was last down nearly 1 basis
point to 4.570%, while the 30-year yield was down almost 3 basis points to
5.088%.
The minutes of the Federal Reserve’s
April meeting on Wednesday showed that a majority of policymakers now believed
rate hikes could be appropriate if the rise in energy prices kept inflation
elevated above the central bank’s 2% target.
Thursday also saw a largely solid
economic calendar. The number of Americans filing for initial jobless claims in
the past week fell 3k to 209k, lower than the expected figure of 210k.
Continuing claims for the week ending May 9 rose 6k to 1.782 million, also
below the consensus estimate.
Separately, S&P Global’s
flash purchasing managers’ index readings for May showed overall U.S. business
activity, covering both manufacturing and services, holding steady from April.
In a bright spot, indexes for both manufacturing output and manufacturing PMI
hit 49- and 48-month highs, respectively.
Nvidia slips nearly 2%
Wall Street’s focus on Thursday was also
on Nvidia. The world’s largest publicly-listed
company delivered a quarterly top- and bottom-line beat after hours on
Wednesday, and provided current quarter revenue guidance that beat
expectations. The chipmaker also unveiled a new $80 billion share buyback
program and tweaked its reporting structure.
The company’s fiscal first quarter
revenue spiked 85% Y/Y to $81.62 billion, while its adjusted net income more
than doubled to $45.55 billion. Nvidia has been a
major beneficiary of a spike in an expenditures by
big-name tech players keen on building out the infrastructure needed to
underpin cutting-edge AI models, also known as hyperscalers.
Nvidia top boss Jensen Huang on the earnings conference
call noted that hyperscaler capital expenditure was
expected to be $1 trillion this year.
"I have every expectation it’s
going to grow from here for fundamentally good reasons. This is the way
computing is going to work in the future. If they don’t have the compute, they
won’t have the revenues. It is very clear. Compute is revenues. Compute is
profit," Huang said.
However, with expectations sky high
going into the quarterly report, the performance was not enough to quell
questions about the company’s massive $5 trillion valuation. Shares of the
chipmaker largely slipped after hours on Wednesday and before the opening bell
on Thursday. They ended 1.8% lower.
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