News Bulletin
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
Evening Edition
Economic Numbers:
|
Time |
Event |
Actual |
Forecast |
Previous |
|
Tuesday, May 19, 2026 |
||||
|
8:00 |
Fed Waller Speaks |
|
|
|
|
8:15 |
ADP Employment Change Weekly |
42.25K |
|
33.00K |
|
10:00 |
Pending Home Sales (MoM)
(Apr) |
1.40% |
1.00% |
1.70% |
Indices
|
|
CLOSE |
50 DMA |
200 DMA |
|
DJIA |
49,363.88 |
48,066.16 |
47,514.68 |
|
NASDAQ |
25,870.71 |
23,703.47 |
23,008.23 |
|
S&P 500 |
7,353.61 |
6,941.64 |
6,792.06 |
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 |
|
Home Depot HD:US |
3.43 |
3.41 |
41.77B |
41.59B |
$297.81B |
AM |
|
Keysight Technologies KEYS:US |
|
2.31 |
|
1.7B |
$58.34B |
PM |
|
Toll Brothers TOL:US |
|
2.59 |
|
2.41B |
$13.23B |
PM |
|
Masimo MASI:US |
|
1.43 |
|
398.65M |
$9.47B |
AM |
|
Chart Industries GTLS:US |
|
2.47 |
|
1.12B |
$8.76B |
AM |
|
Aimco AIV:US |
|
|
|
|
$7.57B |
PM |
|
Eagle Materials EXP:US |
1.91 |
1.65 |
479.1M |
450.56M |
$6.77B |
AM |
|
HUB HUBG:US |
|
0.39 |
|
885.76M |
$2.38B |
PM |
|
Veris Residential CLI:US |
|
|
|
67.94M |
$1.76B |
PM |
Market News:
Wall Street ended lower on Tuesday,
driven down by a lack of any breakthroughs between Washington and Iran and a
resumption of a global bond sell-off. Technology stocks slipped a day ahead of
industry bellwether Nvidia’s quarterly earnings,
though they closed well off their session lows.
The benchmark S&P 500 index settled
0.6% lower at 7,355.45 points, having earlier fallen as much as 0.9%. The
tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite shed 0.8% to conclude at 25,870.71 points, eating
into a slide of as much as 1.5%. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average
declined 0.7% to finish at 49,364.31 points, cutting into a decrease of as much
as 0.9%.
"Profit taking is underway today as
investor concerns about inflation continue to rise. The sell-off in global
bonds is keeping pressure on equities. Cloud companies are under pressure after
Google and Blackstone announced a joint venture to create data centers using Google TPUs. Memory, storage, and
semiconductor stocks are bouncing back following yesterday’s pullback
Trump says was an ’hour away’ from
attacking Iran
Developments in the Middle East
continued to grab a chunk of the spotlight, after President Donald Trump on
Monday said he had called off carrying out fresh attacks on Iran, following a
request from three Gulf leaders.
The president claimed in a social media
post that "serious negotiations are now taking place," adding that,
"in the opinion" of the Gulf authorities, a "Deal will be made,
which will be very acceptable to the United States of America, as well as all
Countries in the Middle East, and beyond."
He said the agreement would include
"NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS FOR IRAN!" -- although
he flagged that he had ordered the U.S. military to remain prepared to launch a
"full, large scale assault on Iran, on a moment’s notice" if an
accord was not reached.
Trump on Tuesday told reporters that he
was "an hour away" from striking Iran on Monday. "It would have
been happening right now," the president said.
"I had made the decision. So they
called up, they had heard I made the decision, they said ’Sir, could you give a
couple of more days because we think they’re being reasonable,’" Trump
said, referring to the Gulf leaders who had requested him to delay his attack.
The president said he was going to give
Iran "two or three days" to come to the table to make a peace deal. "Maybe Friday, Saturday, Sunday, something, maybe early next
week. A limited period of time," Trump added.
Iran’s state media on Tuesday said
Tehran had sent a peace proposal to the U.S. which would stop hostilities in
all fronts their conflict, including in Lebanon, and seek reparations for
damage caused by the conflict.
Tehran’s plan also calls for U.S. forces
to exit areas close to Iran, as well as the removal of sanctions, the
unfreezing of funds, and the end to an American blockade of Iranian ports, the
IRNA news agency said.
Citing a Pakistani source, Reuters
reported that Islamabad had shared Iran’s proposal with the U.S. Pakistan has
been a frequent intermediary between both sides since the start of the conflict
in late February.
Notably, Iran’s latest offer does not
appear to be substantially different from prior terms that Trump described as
"garbage" last week, Reuters added.
Against this backdrop, oil prices were
mixed on Tuesday, with Brent crude futures, the global benchmark, last down
0.6% to $111.43 a barrel.
Bessent calls for help to disrupt Iran’s finances
Elsewhere, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott
Bessent on Tuesday noted several factors that play a
part in financing terrorism, from shell companies in Europe to shadow banking
networks across the Middle East and drug cartels in the west.
"Treasury has deprived the Iranian
regime of revenue for their weapons programs, terrorist proxies, and nuclear
ambitions," Bessent said in prepared remarks at
a meeting of G7 finance ministers and central bank governors.
"We have disrupted tens of billions
in the regime’s projected oil revenue. We have taken actions to freeze nearly
half a billion in regime-linked cryptocurrency, and
disrupted hundreds of billions in Iran’s illicit financial flows. And we have
intensified our crackdown on Tehran’s shadow banking networks," he
added.
The Treasury Secretary also called on
European allies to help in disrupting Iran’s finances.
"As the United States targets the
financial networks that enemy actors use to perpetrate terror, we trust that
your participation here today reflects a readiness to stand with us in full
measure. That will require, for example, our European partners to join the
United States in taking action against Iran by designating its financiers,
unmasking its shell and front companies, shuttering its bank branches, and dismantling
its proxies," Bessent said.
"It will require those of you in
the Middle East and Asia to root out Iran’s shadow banking networks. And it
will require our partners around the globe to respond with force to the array
of terrorists that we face—from Hizballah to the
Sinaloa Cartel," he added.
AI trade in focus ahead of Nvidia’s results
Away from the Middle East, market
participants were focused on Nvidia’s quarterly
earnings scheduled for Wednesday. Shares of the world’s largest chipmaker ended
0.8% lower, pulling the overall technology sector into the red. However,
several chip stocks advanced, such as Marvell Technology and Arm.
A rally in tech stocks on the back of
the artificial intelligence trade has played a major role in helping the
broader U.S. stock market return to record highs despite the ongoing Middle
East conflict. Nvidia, being the market leader in
making chips that power AI processes, will be a major litmus test of this AI
trade.
"Nvidia’s
earnings will help set the tone for a stock market that is in need of its next
catalyst after an incredible run since the March lows. The stock market’s next
catalyst takes on greater importance during a time like now when the stock
market is a bit tired from its recent gains and as it faces some renewed
worries about rising bond yields and the possibility of a Federal Reserve
interest rate hike due to a resurgence of inflation," Paul Stanley, chief
investment officer at Granite Bay Wealth Management, said.
Speaking of bond yields, U.S. Treasuries
resumed a sell-off on Tuesday after a bit of a breather in the previous
session. Yields have soared across the globe and several benchmark instruments
have set "highest ever" milestones as traders have raised their
expectations of interest rate hikes by central banks to combat the inflationary
shock emerging from surging oil prices.
"Stocks are finding it quite
difficult, if not impossible, to ignore higher bond yields and reduced
expectations for rate cuts. Friday’s bond market selloff seemed to remove stock
traders’ ability to shrug off rising yields and oil prices, and that was
generally part of the trend from Friday morning through this morning,"
Steve Sosnick, chief strategist at Interactive
Brokers, told Investing.com.
"That said, it hasn’t fully removed
traders’ tendency to see dips as buying opportunities, and in the past hour or
so we have seen SPX rise from its early lows to flirt with unchanged levels as
yields fell slightly. The test this afternoon will be to see if the recent bump
can hold," Sosnick added.
The benchmark U.S. 10-year yield was
last up 4 basis points to 4.667%, its highest level since January 2025.
Meanwhile, the longer-end U.S. 30-year yield was up 3 basis points to 5.180%,
levels not seen since 2007. Rising yields historically tend to have an outsized
effect on technology stocks because their massive valuations rely heavily on
profits expected in the future.
"The reason Nvidia’s
earnings are important is because for a stock this large, investors need some
reassurance that the AI story is still alive and well and that the company is
producing enough revenue growth to back up its elevated valuation. We believe
that Nvidia will report financial results that
justify its valuation, which is just what the stock market is looking for given
the company’s oversized weighting in the broader market," Stanley added.
Home Depot sees consumer resilience
Turning to individual stocks, Home Depot
said that homeowner shoppers are continuing to buy products from the
do-it-yourself chain, despite headwinds from accelerating gasoline-pump prices.
Speaking to CNBC, CFO Richard McPhail said that the homeowner is "perhaps more
protected financially than other customer cohorts," although he flagged
that customers are engaged "up to a certain point."
For internal use only