The Week the Scoreboard Changed
In 48 hours: the Fed held and showed four dissents — the most divided FOMC since 1992. Four Magnificent Seven companies beat on earnings. GDP came in at 2.0% with PCE inflation at 4.5%. Japan intervened in the yen for the first time since 2024. And Iran cancelled the negotiators’ trip to Pakistan. Every instrument pointed in a different direction simultaneously.
| Index | Region | May 1 Close | WTD % | Since Lib. Day | Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | |||||
| S&P 500 | US | 7,230 | +0.91% | +27.5% | Record close; strongest monthly gain since 2020 |
| Nasdaq Composite | US | 25,114 | +1.11% | +32% | All-time high; Apple +3% closes earnings week |
| Dow Jones Ind. Avg. | US | 49,499 | −0.31% | +25% | Lagged; energy-heavy sectors weighed |
| Europe | |||||
| FTSE 100 | UK | ~10,233 | −0.46% | +18.4% | Energy + Brent crude settling above $115 pressure |
| Euro Stoxx 50 | EU | ~5,912 | +1.65% | +14.8% | Partial recovery; PMI data less dire than Ifo suggested |
| DAX | Germany | ~24,339 | +1.60% | +15.5% | Technology-adjacent names lifted by Mag 7 capex signal |
| Asia-Pacific | |||||
| SSE Composite | China | ~4,180 | +1.68% | +24.8% | Pre-summit positioning; stimulus intact |
| Hang Seng | HK | ~26,394 | +3.51% | +14.3% | Best week since Oct Busan summit; summit optimism |
| Nifty 50 | India | ~24,613 | +1.70% | +4.7% | Strong close; Hormuz partial progress + FII return |
| Nikkei 225 | Japan | 59,513 | +0.38% | +28% | Closed higher despite yen intervention volatility |
| Commodities / Fixed Income / FX | |||||
| Brent Crude | — | ~$112/bbl | Eased | — | Iran sending response through Pakistan; modest relief |
| USD/JPY | — | ~156.5 | Yen +3% | — | MOF intervened Apr 30; ~¥5.5 trillion deployed |
| US 10-yr Yield | — | ~4.35% | Rose | — | PCE 4.5% shock; FOMC hold language read as hawkish |
| Release | Period | Actual | vs. Est. / Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| US GDP (Advance) | Q1 2026 | +2.0% annualised | Below 2.3% est; driven by shutdown-rebound & defence spending; PCE +4.5% (shock) |
| PCE Price Index | Q1 2026 | +4.5% annualised | Fed’s preferred gauge; more than double 2% target; core PCE +4.3% |
| FOMC Decision | Apr 28–29 | Hold 3.50%–3.75% | 8-4 vote — most divided since 1992; Miran cut, Logan/Kashkari/Hammack opposed easing bias |
| Powell press conference | Apr 29 | Last as Chair | Powell’s term ends May 15; Kevin Warsh to succeed; Powell likely stays as Governor |
| BoJ Decision | Apr 28 | Hold 0.75% | 6-3 vote; three dissenters wanted hike to 1.0%; FY2026 growth cut to 0.5%; CPI raised to 2.8% |
| ISM Manufacturing PMI | Apr 2026 | Prices Index 84.6 | Highest since Apr 2022; tariff + energy cost pressure; headline activity expanded |
| Japan Yen Intervention | Apr 30 | ~¥5.5tn deployed | First intervention since Jul 2024; yen surged 3% on day; MOF did not confirm officially |
| Microsoft Q3 FY26 | Apr 29 | Rev $82.9bn +18% | Beat; AI run rate $37bn ARR, +123% YoY; Azure cloud strong |
| Meta Q1 2026 | Apr 29 | Rev $56.3bn +33% | Beat; net income $26.8bn +61%; capex raised to $125–145bn; Meta Superintelligence Labs launch |
| Alphabet Q1 2026 | Apr 29 | Beat | Cloud and search both above estimates; AI monetisation accelerating |
| Amazon Q1 2026 | Apr 29 | Beat; AWS >20% growth | Cloud market share intact; guidance strong despite energy headwind on logistics |
| Apple Q2 FY26 | Apr 30 | Rev beat; EPS beat | +3% share price; revenue outlook above consensus despite iPhone revenue miss |
Trump Cancels Negotiators’ Pakistan Trip: The Stalemate Deepens, the Architecture Shifts
On April 25, Trump announced that the US negotiating team would not travel to Islamabad for the scheduled next round of talks, citing what he described as divisions within Iranian leadership. The cancellation came two days after he claimed on Truth Social that the US “fully controls” the Strait of Hormuz — a statement that both The Guardian and CENTCOM’s own description of a “dual blockade” contradict directly. Iran’s parliament speaker Ghalibaf tweeted calling reports of negotiations “fake news” and labelled it “Operation Trust Me Bro failed.” Separately, Iran’s regime formed a new Bureau of Persian Gulf Strait to manage toll collection from vessels passing through — a structural step that treats Hormuz not as a crisis to resolve but as a permanent revenue source to institutionalise. The ceasefire was extended again, nominally, but the negotiating architecture is being replaced by a bureaucratic architecture. On May 1, Trump issued letters to congressional leaders under the 1973 War Powers Resolution stating hostilities had ended “so far” but conflict remains — a technical filing that limits his exposure without resolving the underlying situation.
→ Wikipedia: 2025–2026 Iran–United States negotiations (live)Powell’s Last FOMC: Four Dissents, the Most Divided Vote Since 1992, and a Language Shift on Inflation
The FOMC held the federal funds rate at 3.50%–3.75% on April 29 — the third consecutive hold — but the decision was marked by four dissents, the most since October 1992. Governor Stephen Miran dissented for a cut; regional presidents Lorie Logan, Neel Kashkari, and Beth Hammack dissented against the retention of an easing bias in the statement. The inflation language in the statement was upgraded from “somewhat elevated” to “elevated,” and the statement explicitly cited “developments in the Middle East” as contributing to a “high level of uncertainty.” This was Powell’s final press conference as Chair — his term ends May 15, with Kevin Warsh expected to succeed him. Warsh, who has consistently argued against premature easing and publicly called for rate hikes during the 2021–22 inflation surge, inherits a Fed with a 4.5% PCE reading, a 10-year yield at 4.35%, and a still-active energy shock. The EY analysis notes plainly that “a meaningful dovish shift will be difficult” under Warsh. Markets for now have priced the June meeting as a hold, with any cut pushed to September at the earliest.
→ EY: FOMC Meeting April 28–29, 2026 AnalysisGDP 2.0%, PCE 4.5%: The Headline Rebounds, the Composition Warns
The BEA’s advance estimate for Q1 2026 GDP came in at 2.0% annualised — a sharp recovery from Q4 2025’s 0.5% pace, but below the 2.3% consensus. The composition is the story. The headline rebound was driven primarily by two mechanical factors: federal nondefense employee compensation snapped back as workers returned after the 43-day government shutdown, and Iran-related defence spending added another layer. Private-sector final sales to domestic purchasers — the cleanest read on underlying demand — grew a solid 2.5%, partly driven by the AI data centre build-out that Oxford Economics described as operating “more than outweighing the drag from higher energy prices for now.” But the PCE price index — the Fed’s preferred gauge — surged to 4.5% annualised (core PCE 4.3%), the sharpest quarterly acceleration in years. The analytical verdict: the GDP print is a distorted rebound with real underlying resilience, but the inflation shock is genuine and sticky, and the Q2 handoff will depend entirely on whether the AI and fiscal tailwinds can absorb the energy cost drag as the shutdown-rebound fades. The ISM manufacturing prices index hit 84.6 in April — the highest since April 2022 — confirming that cost pressures are widening beyond energy into the supply chain.
→ BEA: GDP Advance Estimate Q1 2026, April 30$56bn Meta Quarter, $37bn Microsoft AI Run Rate, Apple +3%: The AI Boom Loop Confirmation
The 48 hours after the FOMC decision delivered the most concentrated set of corporate data releases in recent memory. Microsoft reported revenue of $82.9bn (+18%), with its AI business crossing a $37bn annual revenue run rate — up 123% year-over-year. Meta reported $56.3bn in revenue (+33%), net income of $26.8bn (+61%), and raised its 2026 capex guidance to $125–145bn (previously $115–135bn), citing the launch of Meta Superintelligence Labs. Alphabet and Amazon both beat, with cloud growth at both companies confirming AI infrastructure demand is broadening beyond hyperscaler capex into enterprise revenue. Apple closed the cluster on Thursday with a fiscal Q2 revenue and earnings beat, with a current-quarter revenue outlook above consensus despite a second consecutive miss on iPhone revenue — the market read this as services and AI device revenue compensating. All five all-beat simultaneously. The shared analytical signal across all five: capex trajectories are rising, not plateauing, and revenue is accelerating fast enough that the market is willing to look through the energy-driven macro headwind. Meta’s capex at $125–145bn full-year is now approximately 2.5× its 2024 level. The question the next cycle of earnings will answer is whether gross margins can absorb the energy and tariff cost increases that every other sector is flagging.
→ Motley Fool: Magnificent Seven Q1 2026 Results AnalysisBoJ 6-3 Hold, Growth Halved, Inflation Doubled — Then MOF Fires the Bazooka
The Bank of Japan held its policy rate at 0.75% on April 28, but the decision and its quarterly outlook delivered a distinctly stagflationary message. Three board members (Nakagawa, Takata, Tamura) dissented in favour of a hike to 1.0% — the largest opposition to a BoJ decision under Governor Ueda. The quarterly Outlook revised FY2026 core CPI to 2.8% (from 1.9%) and cut FY2026 growth to 0.5% (from 1.0%): exactly the configuration the BoJ has the hardest time navigating. Two days later, the Ministry of Finance deployed approximately ¥5.5 trillion (~$35bn) in yen-buying intervention on April 30, as the yen broke through the politically sensitive JPY 160 level for the first time since mid-2024. The yen surged 3% on the day — the largest single-session move since December 2022 — with markets speculating a second round followed early in the following week. The analytical read: Japan is squeezed between imported energy inflation pushing the BoJ toward hikes, a growth outlook demanding accommodation, and a currency that is weakening structurally because the rate differential with the US is not closing. The MOF’s intervention buys time; it does not change the underlying arithmetic.
→ CNBC: Bank of Japan April 2026 DecisionHang Seng’s Best Week Since Busan as Summit Positioning Intensifies — Transaction Wins Being Priced
The Hang Seng rose 3.51% on the week — its strongest weekly performance since the October 2025 Busan summit — as market participants began pricing a substantive outcome from the May 14–15 Trump–Xi Beijing meeting with more conviction. SSE Composite added 1.68%. The proximate catalyst was a combination of Mag 7 earnings confirming the AI investment cycle that benefits Chinese suppliers and semiconductor-adjacent plays, plus fresh reporting that pre-summit technical working groups have converged on a framework covering soybean and aircraft purchases, a tariff reduction from the 10% baseline, and extension language for the November 2026 truce. China’s manufacturing PMI for April released this week showed stabilisation, supported by domestic demand and stimulus. The analytically important sub-text: DeepSeek’s V4 launch and Xi’s Hormuz call from the prior week continue to frame China’s pre-summit positioning as competence-demonstration rather than concession-signalling. The Hang Seng is pricing transaction wins; a substantive architectural outcome would re-rate it to the 28,000–29,000 range. A photo-op outcome leaves the 25,200–27,300 range intact.
→ SCMP: Why Trade Wins Aren’t Enough for Trump–Xi SummitNifty Extends Recovery, FII Flows Turn: The Hormuz-Oil Sensitivity Trade Begins Expressing Itself
The Nifty 50 rose 1.70% on the week to close at approximately 24,613 — the strongest weekly performance since the ceasefire was announced on April 7, and the clearest expression yet of the oil-sensitivity thesis running in reverse. Brent crude eased from $112 to around $108 through the week as Iran sent its response to US proposals through Pakistani mediators, injecting just enough diplomatic hope to let oil retreat without triggering a supply normalisation. India’s current account arithmetic improves non-linearly with each dollar Brent falls from its peak — the Nifty’s sensitivity is symmetric to Brent in both directions. FII flows turned modestly positive for the first time in several weeks, with the April net outflow figure declining. Domestically, the Reserve Bank of India held its meeting with a dovish bias maintained, and Q4 FY26 earnings across consumer staples and IT services beat conservative estimates. The ENSO-IOD monsoon window is now five weeks away; La Niña-neutral conditions with the IOD monitoring ongoing. The Nifty is trading at ~18.9x forward P/E, approaching valuations DSP Research described as close to GFC-era levels for several index heavyweights.
→ T. Rowe Price: Global Markets Weekly, May 1Powell’s Final Meeting: The Warsh Fed Inherits $115 Oil, a 4.5% PCE, and a Divided FOMC
The FOMC’s four-way dissent is analytically more important than the hold itself. The two-sided split — one dove (Miran) and three hawks (Logan, Kashkari, Hammack) — reflects a committee that genuinely cannot agree on which mandate risk is more pressing. In an oil shock environment with a 4.5% PCE reading, the hawks who want to remove the easing bias have the cleaner argument; in a quarter where private consumption decelerated and real disposable incomes are being eroded, Miran’s case for a cut is not without logic. Kevin Warsh — nominated but not yet confirmed — will inherit this split committee on May 15. His public record is unambiguous: he has consistently argued for pre-emptive tightening in the face of inflation risk and argued against QE-era accommodation. Under his chair, the bar for any rate cut is materially higher than under Powell. The market has begun pricing this: CME FedWatch now shows the earliest meaningful probability of a cut at the September 2026 meeting. Trump’s approval at net −18.8 (Silver Bulletin Apr 25) with PCE at 4.5% means the political pressure for cuts collides directly with the incoming chair’s intellectual framework — a tension that will define the second half of 2026.
→ TD Economics: FOMC April 28–29 Analysis| Development | One-line read |
|---|---|
| War Powers Resolution filing May 1, 2026 |
Trump sent letters to congressional leaders under the 1973 War Powers Resolution stating hostilities with Iran had “ended so far” but conflict remains ongoing — a legally ambiguous filing that limits the 60-day clock exposure without resolving whether Congress could force withdrawal. Signals the administration’s legal posture is managing exposure, not seeking congressional authorisation. |
| Iran “Bureau of Persian Gulf Strait” Week of Apr 25–May 1 |
Iran’s government formally established a new Bureau of Persian Gulf Strait to administer toll collection from vessels passing through Hormuz — institutionalising the closure as a revenue mechanism rather than treating it as a temporary crisis measure. Combined with parliament’s proposed legislation on hostile-nation access, this signals Iran’s medium-term posture is permanent strategic leverage, not negotiating-table pressure. |
| ISM Manufacturing Prices 84.6 May 1, 2026 |
ISM manufacturing prices sub-index hit 84.6 in April — the highest since April 2022 and 25.6 percentage points above the prior month — driven by energy and tariff cost pressures simultaneously. This is a leading indicator of goods-sector CPI that will appear in the May and June prints, and is the data point that most directly validates the hawks’ concern at the FOMC that the PCE shock is not transitory. |
| Kevin Warsh Senate Banking testimony Week of Apr 21–25 |
Warsh’s confirmation hearings produced no material market-moving statements, confirming the market’s read that he will be confirmed without significant controversy. His written testimony emphasised “credibility” and “pre-emption” in inflation management — consistent with his public record. The phrase to watch for in his first press conference: whether he retains the “easing bias” language the four hawkish dissenters wanted removed. |
| May 14–15 Beijing summit logistics Apr 25–May 1 |
Reporting confirmed Trump will become the first sitting US president to visit China in nearly a decade. Pre-summit technical working groups have been meeting on rare earths, soybean commitments, and a joint “Board of Trade” framework. The compressed timeline (originally late March, pushed by the Iran war) means complex security files — semiconductors, Taiwan, Iran posture — are not adequately staffed for substantive movement. |
| Romania government confidence vote Ongoing from Apr 18 crisis |
PM Bolojan’s minority government formally requested a confidence vote following the Social Democratic Party withdrawal. The vote is expected within the 45-day window; failure risks losing €8bn in EU recovery funding tied to reform conditionality. This remains the week’s key CEE political risk — underlining that the broader European political fragility flagged in the Apr 12 Hungarian election is not isolated. |
The week’s central paradox: the S&P 500 closed at a record high on the same week that the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge hit 4.5%, the FOMC produced its most divided vote since 1992, Japan was forced to intervene in the yen, and Iran institutionalised the Hormuz closure as a permanent revenue bureau. The market chose to look through all of it, anchored by Magnificent Seven earnings that confirmed the AI capex cycle is accelerating, not plateauing. That is a defensible analytical position for as long as the ceasefire holds and crude stays below $120. It becomes untenable the moment either condition breaks.
The incoming Warsh Fed is the structural story of the second half of 2026. He inherits a 4.5% PCE, a divided committee, and a political environment where the president is at net −18.8 approval and wants lower rates. His intellectual framework — pre-emptive inflation control — directly opposes that political pressure. The September cut that markets are currently pricing is probably only available if Brent falls to $90 or below, core PCE decelerates materially, and the labour market softens measurably. None of those conditions are currently in view.
The May 14–15 Trump–Xi summit is the next binary event. Transaction wins are priced. Architecture is the upside surprise. Iran is the exogenous variable that no one can price with confidence — except to note that institutionalising the Hormuz closure as a toll bureau is exactly the kind of structural shift that makes a “return to normal” harder, not easier, with each passing week. Navigate by what you know. Adjust when the picture changes.
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