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Everything has a reason to go up now that oil’s downEverything has a reason to go up now that oil’s down

US stocks were off to the races on Wednesday**** after the US and Iran agreed to a two-week ceasefire, during which time oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz are expected to pick up as the two sides look to negotiate a more enduring peace.

  • Does your business need oil to move? Congrats, your stock is up! It was a great day for stocks where oil is a high input cost, like cruises and airlines: American AirlinesUnited AirlinesSouthwest AirlinesCarnival, and Norwegian Cruise Line
  • Is your business the kind of AI momentum trade that requires people to feel pretty good about the economy in order to justify investment? Congrats, your stock is up! It was a solid day for memory and opticsnames like MicronCoherentSeagate TechnologyWestern DigitalCorning,LumentumCiena Corp.Sandisk, and Applied Optoelectronics.
  • Is your business highly speculative in a way that requires market enthusiasm to be downright frothy to do well? Congrats, your stock is up! It was a great day for quantum computing companies (D-Wave Quantum,Rigetti ComputingInfleqtion, and IonQ) and others like Plug PowerRocket Lab, and SoundHound AI.

Not everyone can win, though. Do you make money off of expensive oil? Bad luck for ExxonDowCF Industries, and APA Corporation — your stock ate it yesterday.

The Takeaway

So, all set for the markets? On one hand, this is a decisive market reaction rewarding negotiators with tangible financial market improvements as a result of the ceasefire. 

On the other hand, transits through the Strait of Hormuz remain at wartime lows and have not returned anywhere near pre-conflict levels, and there are still missiles flying in the region. To recap, the ceasefire contingent on opening the strait has neither ceased the fire nor opened the strait.

Meta jumps after it releases Superintelligence Labs’ first model: Muse SparkMeta jumps after it releases Superintelligence Labs’ first model: Muse Spark

The first big release from Meta’s Superintelligence Labs is here: a new multimodal reasoning model called Muse Spark. Shares of Meta spiked on the news, extending gains it had made earlier in the day on optimism over the ceasefire with Iran.

  • Meta has been playing catch-up in the generative-AI race, watching startups OpenAI and Anthropic leap ahead with ever more capable models, after the bungled rollout of its Llama 4 models.
  • “Looking ahead, we plan to release increasingly advanced models that push the frontier of intelligence and capabilities, including new open source models,” Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a post on Threads. 
  • “We are building products that don’t just answer your questions but act as agents that do things for you. I am optimistic that this will support a wave of creativity, entrepreneurship, growth, and health. I’m looking forward to sharing more soon.”

Meta says the release is the first in a Muse family of models, which it says it will scale up over time. The benchmark scores released by Meta show Spark to be capable, with solid scores among popular tests, but not any huge leaps over leading models from Anthropic, OpenAI, xAI, and Google.

The Takeaway

After Meta went on an expensive hiring spree assembling an all-star team of AI researchers, investors have been eager to see the fruits of this team, and to see if the accompanying billions of capex dedicated to power it — $115 billion to $135 billion this year alone — were worth it.