Market Pulse | AM Buzz
Leonardo Cardoso, CFA

Cross-asset market intelligence and macro developments.
Market Pulse AM | 20260527_TD101
Markets are extending the AI-driven rally into a fifth consecutive session—but the underlying macro tension between easing yields and increasingly hawkish central banks continues to build beneath the surface.
U.S. futures are again pointing toward record highs, with S&P 500 Index futures rising 0.4% and Nasdaq-100 Index futures gaining 0.6% as semiconductor momentum remains the dominant force across global markets.
The rally continues to narrow aggressively.
Asia led overnight gains, with the MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbing 1.7% to a fresh record while South Korea’s KOSPI Index surged 2.3% as chipmakers extended their extraordinary run. SK Hynix joined Micron Technology above the $1 trillion market capitalization threshold, reinforcing how concentrated the global equity rally has become around AI infrastructure and memory demand.
Europe followed higher.
The STOXX Europe 600 rose 0.4%, moving within 0.5% of its pre-war February peak as lower oil prices eased inflation concerns and supported cyclical sectors. ASML Holding continued benefiting from the AI trade, while European auto stocks gained after a third consecutive increase in regional vehicle sales.
The dominant macro shift overnight, however, came from energy and rates.
Brent Crude fell 2.9% to below $97, while WTI Crude Oil declined 3.8% as optimism surrounding U.S.–Iran negotiations improved expectations that the Strait of Hormuz could eventually reopen.
That decline immediately transmitted across asset classes:
Lower Oil → Lower Inflation Expectations → Lower Yields → Higher Equity Valuations
Treasury yields fell for a fourth consecutive session, with the U.S. 10-year yield declining toward 4.47% and the 30-year yield falling to 5.02%. German bunds, Japanese government bonds, and several emerging-market sovereign yields also moved lower.
But central banks are simultaneously becoming more hawkish.
Markets are now pricing a 63% probability of Fed rate hikes by December as incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh prioritizes inflation credibility. Even traditionally dovish Fed Governor Christopher Waller stated the next policy move could be “just as likely” to be a hike as a cut.
Meanwhile:
The European Central Bank is increasingly signaling a June hike
The Bank of Japan is discussing its first outsized hike since 1990
Inflation expectations remain elevated despite easing energy prices
Credit markets continue showing remarkable resilience.
Investment-grade spreads held near 106bps, high-yield spreads remained near multi-year tights, and primary issuance reopened aggressively after the holiday weekend. Warner Bros. Discovery successfully tightened pricing on a $15 billion loan, reinforcing how strong investor appetite remains despite geopolitical and policy uncertainty.
Meanwhile, gold fell 1.3% as safe-haven demand faded, while copper continued climbing amid persistent bullish positioning and AI-driven infrastructure demand.
Brazen Perspective:
Markets are currently pricing two very different narratives simultaneously:
Short-term disinflation optimism from falling oilvs.longer-term inflation persistence driving a global hawkish central bank pivot
For now, lower yields and AI momentum continue dominating price action.
But if geopolitical optimism fades—or inflation proves sticky despite lower oil—the current equilibrium could reverse quickly.