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Pre-market futures are back toward all-time high levels this morning, responding to the news over the weekend that the war between the U.S. and Iran has ended. Both countries have agreed to an interim Memorandum of Understanding (MOU), which includes an end to hostilities and the re-opening of the Strait of Hormuz. As a result, spot oil prices have come down to $80 per barrel (/bbl) on WTI, way down from the $113/bbl we were seeing 10 weeks ago.
Iran is expected to sign this MOU on Friday, meaning all that needs to happen between now and then is nothing — no military strikes, including in Lebanon. The U.S. has agreed to end its naval blockade at the Strait of Hormuz, and Iran would end its pursuit for building nuclear weapons. Assuming all goes well this week, there will still be weeks of clearing mines out of the Strait before global oil deliveries begin to return to normal levels.
The agreement comes directly ahead of a new G7 summit this week, taking place in the alpine region of France near Geneva, Switzerland. Aside from the ceasing of hostilities in the Middle East, topics under discussion will no doubt include U.S. tariffs, continued support for Ukraine from Russia’s invasion 4+ years ago, and China’s grip on rare earth minerals.
Empire State Manufacturing Misses Estimates
Monthly manufacturing data from the state of New York, Empire State Manufacturing, is out this morning for the month of June: 5.7 is the lowest print since March, below consensus expectations for +13.9, and less than a third of the unrevised 19.6 reported a month ago. That said, it marks the third-straight month of Empire State growth, which is something we haven’t seen since late 2021/early 2022. Both new orders and shipments are well off the lows we were seeing as recently as a year ago.
Kevin Warsh’s 1st FOMC Meeting as Fed Chair This Week
After eight years of the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) chaired by Jerome Powell — which was marked by a swift response slashing rates at the foothills of the Covid pandemic, a much slower response to evidence of inflation hitting the economy, and routinely attacked by President Trump by insisting the Fed keep rates at levels that would bring inflation toward 2% — this week marks the first FOMC meeting with his successor, Kevin Warsh. Formerly the youngest Fed Governor on the committee during the Great Recession, he has the opportunity this week to remake the office in his own image.
Warsh was something of a contrarian voting member during his Fed governorship which ended 15 years ago, where he expressed a willingness to raise interest rates as the country, and the world, recovered from the biggest financial meltdown since the Great Depression. This time around, he is more aligned with President Trump, who has argued vehemently for lowering interest rates, even in the face of fresh waves of inflationary pressures.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Warsh intends to conduct his office with less transparency than his predecessor. In yesterday’s report, “Kevin Warsh Wants the Fed to Stop Explaining Everything,” the recently installed Fed Chair advocates “more thinking, less talking.” We expect a different tone from Powell’s relative openness at the press conference following Wednesday’s decision on new Fed monetary policy.
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Newmont is making a notable progress with its growth projects and remains focused on driving shareholder value. The acquisition of Newcrest will also generate significant synergies. Higher gold prices will also drive margins.
Pricing discipline and productivity, accretive acquisitions, expanding data center exposure and growing digital solutions support resilient long-term earnings power overall.
LendingTree's reduced dependence on mortgage-related sources of revenues is expected to support its financials. Also, its inorganic growth moves have strengthened its online lending platform.
Backlog growth, installed base aftermarket, and portfolio-enhancing acquisitions support compounding earnings, while integration and capital returns reinforce long-term value creation.
Mix shift, raised fiscal 2026 guidance, Specialty Alliance integration, and Other segment momentum support multi-year earnings growth and cash generation.
Automation-led product design, expanding global capability, disciplined sales execution and capital returns support PAYC’s sticky client relationships and durable longer-term growth.
Premium assets, leasing demand, portfolio actions and liquidity support Vornado, while premier Manhattan exposure remains the primary growth driver ahead.
The Geismar 3 plant is expected to yield desired results. The company is strengthening its balance sheet. It should also benefit from OCI acquisition, improved MTO operations and demand boost.
Wind and solar variability, third-party transmission reliance, acquisition and refinancing needs, and counterparty performance can potentially disrupt earnings and distributions.
Growth deceleration, heavy spending, macro uncertainty and competitive pricing could limit CrowdStrike’s upside despite product breadth and an improving cash flow trend.
Competition, satellite timing, government budget swings, leverage, and capital needs could delay returns and keep earnings volatility elevated for investors.
Campbell faces ongoing pressure from a slow Snacks turnaround, significant margin compression and a weak FY26 outlook, raising concerns about earnings recovery and profitability.
Tyson Foods leverages a diversified protein portfolio, strong chicken performance and global expansion to deliver resilient growth and long-term shareholder value.
Resilient travel demand, premium mix, loyalty partnerships, and technology-led personalization support revenue durability, cash generation, and strategic flexibility over cycles.
Strength in the Energy Generation/Storage business, balance sheet strength, and focus on autonomous driving, robotics and artificial intelligence are set to drive Tesla.
Kroger drives growth with digital expansion, private label success, fresh offerings and strategic partnerships, while investments in AI and value creation fuel long-term scalability.
Central Garden & Pet’s Cost and Simplicity agenda remains a multi-year driver of operating discipline across sourcing, manufacturing, distribution, portfolio optimization and overhead.
Intel’s leading position in PC market, strength in servers, growing clout in software, IoT & ADAS domains and headway in process technology are positive indicators of future growth prospects.
Traffic-led comps and growing digital, advertising, membership and marketplace streams support margins as Target invests in stores and disciplined execution.