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Just watched the markets shake off some early jitters yesterday. The S&P 500 barely budged, up just 0.04% to close at 6,881.62, while Nasdaq managed 0.36% to 22,748.86. Dow slipped 0.15% to 48,904.78. Nothing dramatic, but the underlying story was pretty interesting.
The real action was in energy and defense plays. Exxon Mobil was on fire, rallying over 5% as crude pushed toward $80. Palantir and other defense names rode that wave too. Makes sense when geopolitical tensions spike and people start thinking about what benefits from that kind of environment.
Meanwhile, the travel sector got punished. Royal Caribbean dropped 3.25% to $300.84 and American Airlines fell 4.21%. High oil prices and global uncertainty just kill margins for those guys. Tech was mixed - Nvidia bounced back after last week's rough ride, and Apple got a small bump ahead of their new iPhone launch. Berkshire Hathaway stumbled though after missing on earnings revenue.
Here's what caught my attention: the market seemed genuinely unsure how to price this. Oil spiked on Middle East conflict concerns, gold jumped to $5,400 an ounce as people rotated to safety, and Treasury yields climbed. You'd think that's a recipe for panic, but by close, things had mostly stabilized. Bitcoin actually moved up, which suggests people weren't rushing for the exits - more like repositioning capital.
The inflation angle is worth watching too. Last week's hotter-than-expected data already had people worried about rate cuts getting delayed. Now throw higher energy costs on top and you've got a real question about whether consumer prices start accelerating again. That's the kind of thing that keeps the Fed from cutting rates anytime soon.
Bottom line: markets are pricing in the geopolitical risk but not panicking about it yet. The real test will be how the situation develops over the next few days. For now, energy and defense names are where the action is, while anything dependent on cheap oil is taking it on the chin.