📊 Market Overview
The S&P 500, Dow, and Nasdaq all fell 0.6% on Tuesday as markets digested a wave of unsettling headlines. The biggest driver was Kevin Warsh, the nominee to lead the Federal Reserve, striking a hawkish (meaning: favoring higher interest rates to fight inflation) tone that rattled investors. Today, all eyes are on Tesla’s earnings report after the bell — kicking off big tech earnings season — along with results from GE Vernova and ServiceNow.
📊 Market Snapshot
When the person who might run the Fed sounds tough on rates, stocks feel it — and that’s exactly what happened yesterday.
📈 The Big Picture
Tuesday’s sell-off came from two directions at once. Kevin Warsh, nominated to chair the Federal Reserve, signaled he’d keep interest rates high to fight inflation. At the same time, rising oil prices — fueled by growing tensions with Iran — added to investor anxiety, even as President Trump announced an extension of the ceasefire with Iran, creating a confusing geopolitical picture.
Goldman Sachs is warning that consumers face a challenging stretch ahead, though they still estimate the S&P 500 could rise up to 7% by year-end. The key question is whether consumer confidence and actual market performance will start to align. For your portfolio, this means buckle up for a bumpy earnings season where strong company results may matter more than ever in a nervous market.
📖 Term of the Day
Hawkish — When a central bank leader favors keeping interest rates high (or raising them) to control inflation, even if it slows the economy.
Why you care today: Fed chair nominee Kevin Warsh took a hawkish stance yesterday, which spooked markets because higher rates make borrowing more expensive and can weigh on stock prices.
💼 Watchlist: 3 Stocks to Know Today
Twilio (TWLO) — “The Comeback Kid”
Bank of America upgraded Twilio from Underperform to Buy and nearly doubled its price target from $110 to $190. The reasoning: Twilio won’t be hurt by AI — it will actually become a key infrastructure provider for AI-powered voice and messaging apps.
GitLab (GTLB) — “The Caution Sign”
Bank of America downgraded GitLab from Buy to Neutral and slashed its price target from $58 to $27. Slowing growth is making it hard to justify the stock, and analysts say it could take 9 to 12 months to prove its AI strategy works.
GE Vernova (GEV) — “The Earnings Star”
GEV shares jumped 7.83% in pre-market after crushing expectations. Earnings came in at $17.44 per share versus a forecast of just $1.67, and the company raised its full-year revenue outlook to $44.5–$45.5 billion.
💬 Esther’s Take