Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq drift lower following US strikes near Strait

May 28, 2026

LIVE Updated 24 mins ago

US stocks rebounded on Thursday amid a report that US and Iranian negotiators reached a breakthrough on a peace deal following a second wave of military strikes on Iran near the Strait of Hormuz.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) hovered around the flat line, while the benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.5% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) added 0.7%, recovering from losses earlier in the session.

US stocks swung higher after Axios reported that US and Iranian negotiators reached an agreement on a 60-day memorandum of understanding; however, the peace deal still requires approval from President Trump. The report signaled progress on US-Iran negotiations, despite the two sides exchanging fire near the Strait of Hormuz on Wednesday.

Oil prices pared gains on Thursday, with Brent crude futures (BZ=F) trading at around $93 per barrel and West Texas Intermediate crude (CL=F) slipping below $90 per barrel.

Meanwhile, tech earnings boosted confidence in the AI trade. Snowflake (SNOW), Marvell (MRVL), and HP (HP) reported strong earnings results after the bell on Wednesday that showcased AI driving spending on cloud, chips, and computers. Snowflake’s earnings and its announcement of a $6 billion deal with Amazon Web Services stole the show, sending its stock up more than 30%.

Economic data on Thursday showed that the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, rose 0.4% in April, gaining slightly less than expected and complicating questions about whether rising prices will increase pressure on the central bank to raise rates.

Elsewhere on the data front, initial jobless claims for the previous week rose to 215,000 from the previous week’s revised tally of 210,000.

LIVE 13 updates

  • America’s CEOs were more pessimistic about the US economy in the first quarter, according to survey data published Thursday.

    The Conference Board’s Measure of CEO Confidence dropped to 47 from 59 in the first quarter, according to data published Thursday. Readings below 50 indicate more negative than positive responses.

    “CEOs reported that the economy is materially worse now than it was six months ago and expected economic conditions to weaken further over the next six months,” Dana Peterson, chief economist at the Conference Board, said in a statement.

    Even so, the number of CEOs expected to increase their capex over the next year rose, while the number of CEOs expecting to cut their capex fell. While 56% of CEOs said they anticipated AI having only a moderate impact, most said they would need to upskill their workforce.

    Roger Ferguson, vice chairman of the Business Council and Chair Emeritus of the Conference Board, noted that the number of CEOs planning to grow their company’s headcount over the next 12 months declined slightly, while the count of CEOs expecting to reduce their headcount ticked up in one more sign of the “low hire, low fire” economy.

  • Shares of defense drone manufacturers rallied on Thursday after the Wall Street Journal reported that the Trump administration is pursuing funding deals with a group of industry players.

    The report noted that the Pentagon has identified companies for possible funding, including Performance Drone Works, Unusual Machines, and Neros Technologies.

    Unusual Machines (UMAC) surged 50% during Thursday’s session, while Red Cat (RCAT) gained 13% and AeroVironment (AVAV) climbed 8%.

    Drones have come into greater focus following Iran’s extensive use of the technology during the Middle East conflict.

  • Space, quantum, and memory ETFs are joining the record-high rush, with Procure Space ETF (UFO), WisdomTree Quantum Computing ETF (WQTM), and Roundhill Memory ETF (DRAM) all hitting fresh intraday all-time highs.

    It’s a risk-on tell from the thematic ETF shelf: Investors are not only buying the biggest tech names anymore — they are reaching for more targeted bets tied to AI infrastructure, chips, and the next wave of speculative growth.

    Meanwhile, large-cap and small-cap indexes are also hitting records.

    Here are today’s intraday record highs:

    Indexes: Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC), S&P 500 (^GSPC), Nasdaq 100 (^NDX), Russell 2000 (^RUT)

    Dow Jones Sectors/Industries: Steel, Trucking, Industrial Metals, Large-Cap Technology, Technology, Computer Hardware, Electronic Equipment

    Large-cap sector ETFs: Technology (XLK)

    Industry/Style/Country ETFs: Value (VLUE), Space (UFO), Quantum computing (WQTM), Memory (DRAM), High Beta (SPHB), South Korea (EWY), Mega Cap (MGC)

    Consumer discretionary stocks: Marriott (MAR)

    Health care stocks: Eli Lilly (LLY)

    Materials stocks: Nucor (NUE)

    Tech stocks: AMD (AMD), ASE Technology (ASX), Arm (ARM), Sandisk (SNDK), Silicon Motion (SIMO), Vishay Intertechnology (VSH), Western Digital (WDC), Datadog (DDOG), Cohu (COHU), Dell Technologies (DELL), Seagate (STX)

  • Tyson Foods (TSN) stock fell nearly 5% on Thursday after the company named Jeff Schomburger as its next CEO, effective Oct. 4, 2026.

    Donnie King, who has served as CEO since May 2021, will remain on the board of directors following his 43-year career at the company.

    Schomburger retired from Procter & Gamble seven years ago and has been a member of the Tyson Foods board since 2016. He has served as lead independent director on the board since 2025.

    In the release, Schomburger said he is “energized by the opportunity” to strengthen the brand, capitalize on “emerging” opportunities like AI, and “continue to win with customers and consumers.”

    The Street was taken aback by the choice of the successor.

    “We do not think Donnie’s retirement itself is a surprise, but we do think the choice of his replacement is unexpected,” JPMorgan analyst Thomas Palmer wrote, adding that investors thought Tyson would choose an internal candidate.

    This is the sixth CEO change among major food companies this year, Palmer pointed out, more than the five transitions in 2025, one in 2024, and four in 2023.

  • Oil prices pared their gains after briefly turning to a loss on the session after Axios reported that the US and Iran have reached a temporary deal that would see traffic through the Strait of Hormuz reopened.

    Futures on Brent crude (BZ=F), the international benchmark, and US benchmark WTI crude (CL=F) both fell to a loss of roughly 0.1% to trade below $93 per barrel and $89 per barrel, respectively. Both contracts had gained roughly 3% earlier in the morning.

    The US and Iran have reached an agreement on a 60-day memorandum that would extend the ceasefire currently in place and begin negotiations on the fate of Iran’s nuclear program, Axios reported Thursday, citing two senior US officials.

    President Trump reportedly asked to take a “few days” to think about the deal on the table, per Axios.

    The terms of the agreement were “mostly agreed as of Tuesday, but both sides still needed to get approval from senior leadership,” Axios reported. Iran has not publicly confirmed its own acceptance of any memorandum.

    The agreement would include free and “unrestricted” traffic for commercial vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, and require that Iran remove mines placed in the water within 30 days, US officials reportedly told Axios.

    The reports offer a glimmer of hope for investors and market-watchers looking for diplomatic solutions in the Middle East, especially after the US and Iran spent the last 48 hours trading rounds of air and drone strikes.

  • Snowflake (SNOW) is having its best day on record.

    Shares of the cloud-based data platform soared 36% on Thursday following a strong earnings report on Wednesday and a $6 billion multiyear deal with Amazon’s (AMZN) Amazon Web Services.

    Yahoo Finance’s Ines Ferré reports:

    Snowflake said AI products contributed to the “strongest sequential product revenue dollar growth” in its history. Fiscal first quarter revenue grew 33% year over year to $1.39 billion.

    The company announced an expanded collaboration with AWS through a new multiyear, $6 billion agreement aimed at accelerating global enterprise AI adoption. It also deepened its partnership with OpenAI (OPAI.PVT).

    Read more here.

  • The US stock market fell into the red on Thursday as military strikes in Iran by the US stoked new fears of renewed conflict, while a bevy of tech earnings helped bolster equity confidence.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) and tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) fell 0.3% and 0.2%, respectively, while the benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) slid by a lesser 0.1%.

    Reports of renewed conflict in the Middle East and no clarity on US-Iran negotiations sent oil prices rising once more, putting pressure on equities.

    Data published Thursday showed the Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, rose 0.4% in April and 3.8% annually on a headline basis. Initial jobless claims for the week ended May 23 rose to 215,000 from the previous week’s revised tally of 210,000.

    Costco Wholesale (COST), Dell Technologies (DELL), and The Gap (GAP) will report after the closing bell. Dollar Tree (DLTR) and Best Buy (BBY) both beat estimates on EPS and revenue Thursday morning.

  • Initial jobless claims rose to 215,000 in the week ended May 23, according to data released by the Department of Labor on Thursday, coming in above the previous week’s revised tally of 210,000 first-time claims.

    Economists had expected initial claims to be lower at 211,000 for the week, according to consensus estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The four-week moving average of initial claims fell to 209,000 from 202,750 the week prior.

    Continuing claims, which track the unemployed population still seeking work, rose to 1.786 million in the week ended May 16 from the prior week’s revised count of 1.771 million.

    Economists had been looking for 1.784 million continuing claims.

  • Prices rose by 0.4% in April over the previous month, according to Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index data released Thursday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

    The growth came in below economists’ expectations of 0.5%, according to Bloomberg’s consensus estimates, and below March’s 0.7% increase.

    “Core” PCE, which excludes the more volatile food and energy categories, rose 0.2% on the month. The print fell slightly short of economists’ expectations of 0.3% for the Federal Reserve’s preferred inflation measure and March’s 0.3% gain.

    On an annual basis, the headline and core PCE price indexes rose 3.8% and 3.3%, respectively, in April from the previous year, in line with expectations on both measures.

    Meanwhile, personal income was flat in April on a monthly basis, sharply below the previous month’s 0.5% revised increase and economist expectations of 0.4% growth.

    Personal spending increased 0.5% from last month, coming in equal to expectations and below the previous month’s revised growth of 1%.

  • The casino giant Caesars Entertainment (CZR) is set to be acquired by Fertitta Entertainment, a conglomerate with holdings primarily in the hospitality industry, in a $17.6 billion all-cash deal, including $11.9 billion in Caesars debt.

    Shares in Caesars traded up by 1.8% in premarket trading on Thursday.

    Fertitta will pay Caesars shareholders $31 per share in cash, the companies announced Thursday morning, offering shareholders a 7.7% premium over where the stock closed trading on Wednesday. The deal includes a “go-shop” period through July 11, during which Caesars can review other offers.

    The Houston real estate leader, Tilman Fertitta, has long pursued a merger between Caesars and his own Fertitta Entertainment, Bloomberg reported. If the deal goes through, it would combine Caesars network of casino properties with Fertitta’s Landry’s restaurants and Golden Nugget properties.

  • Salesforce (CRM) stock fell modestly in premarket trading on Thursday following its latest quarter earnings.

    Shares of the software player are down 35% year to date amid ongoing concerns that artificial intelligence models from OpenAI (OPAI.PVT) and Anthropic (ANTH.PVT) would disrupt the business models of the company and others like it.

    That prompted Salesforce CEO Marc Benioff to make a grand gesture to signal to the Wall Street bears that the company’s not going down without a fight.

    Yahoo Finance’s Brian Sozzi reports on the move:

    Salesforce said late Wednesday that it repurchased a shocking $27 billion in its stock in the most recent quarter. For perspective, the company spent about $3.9 billion in buybacks in the preceding quarter.

    Usually, a company will buy back its stock to signal to investors it’s undervalued. After all, cash could be spent in places other than buybacks, such as on new plants and equipment.

    It was Benioff’s latest attempt to fight back against the Saas Apocalypse narrative that AI models would render software companies obsolete, which has hammered software stocks in recent months, and his in particular.

    Read more here.

  • Best Buy (BBY) stock jumped 8% in premarket trading after stronger-than-expected sales highlighted consumer resilience.

    The report was Best Buy’s first since the company announced CEO Corie Barry will step down from the electronics retailer at the end of the third quarter.

    Yahoo Finance’s Brooke DiPalma reports on the quarter:

    Best Buy’s first quarter results surpassed Wall Street’s expectations on Thursday morning as key product launches like Apple’s (AAPL) MacBook Neo and higher tax refunds helped boost sales.

    The company posted same-store sales growth of 2%, far higher than Wall Street’s expectations of 0.9% in the fiscal first quarter and exceeding Best Buy’s forecast of 1% for the quarter. That also marks a sharp reversal from a 0.8% decline in the fourth quarter when consumers pulled back on holiday purchases.

    Revenue came in at $8.9 billion, above the $8.8 billion expected, alongside adjusted earnings growth of $1.28 per share, which was also above the $1.22 per share expected.

    CEO Corie Barry said the results were driven by positive same-store sales growth “across the majority of our major product categories and strong performance in our Best Buy Ads and Marketplace initiatives.”

    Read more here.

  • Bloomberg reports:

    Oil advanced, following a drop of more than 5% on Wednesday, as the US and Iran remained at odds over how to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and a report pointed to fresh military strikes in the Islamic Republic.

    Brent (BZ=F) rose above $96 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) was near $90. President Donald Trump said he was “not satisfied” with talks, as the White House denied an Iranian report on a draft agreement that said Tehran and Oman would oversee the waterway.

    Crude is still on pace for a second weekly drop on optimism that the warring parties will manage to conclude at least an interim deal, despite the challenges. Sticking points in the negotiations include the nation’s nuclear program and Iran wanting to retain control over Hormuz, which remains subject to a double blockade imposed by both Tehran and Washington.

    The US carried out new strikes in Iran against a site that posed a threat to US forces and traffic in the strait, a Reuters reporter said on X, citing a US official. Earlier this week, the US had attacked sites around Hormuz.

    Read more here.

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