WS #7158
The dominant narrative remains the escalating Iran/Strait of Hormuz crisis, with the Pentagon planning 'Operation Sledgehammer' designation for potential conflict resumption, which would restart the 60-day War Powers Act clock if the ceasefire fails. This is corroborated by multiple sources including NYT and Bloomberg, confirming Iran retains 70% of its missile stockpile and has restored access to 30 of 33 missile sites. The UAE's joint attack on Iran alongside Israel is confirmed by Bloomberg and widely discussed on social media, marking a significant escalation. Oil inventories are declining faster than expected per the EIA, with WTI settling at $102.18 (+4.19%) and Brent at $107.77 (+3.42%). US inflation jumped to 3.8% annual rate, and Goldman Sachs sees dollar strength as the energy shock keeps rates high. On the positive side, NVDA and AAPL hit record highs, suggesting tech momentum may be decoupling from macro headwinds. Fervo Energy priced an upsized IPO at $27/share, indicating continued interest in energy transition. The overall narrative is one of escalation in the Middle East conflict with second-order effects on inflation, energy, and commodities, while tech stocks show resilience.
Key developments
- Pentagon plans 'Operation Sledgehammer' designation for potential Iran conflict resumption
- UAE confirmed to have carried out joint attack on Iran alongside Israel
- US intelligence confirms Iran retains 70% of missile stockpile and restored access to 30 of 33 missile sites
- Global oil inventories declining faster than expected as Iran war continues - EIA
- US CPI annual inflation at 3.8%, hotter than expected; Goldman Sachs sees dollar strength
- NVDA and AAPL hit record highs, S&P 500 at new all-time high
- Fervo Energy prices upsized IPO at $27/share, to trade on Nasdaq under FRVO