Nvidia Eve, $105 Oil & Warsh Era Begins | Capital Street FX Daily Brief · US Session · 18 May 2026
Nvidia Eve, $105 Oil & the Warsh Era Begins
US equities open the week in a precarious tug-of-war. On one side, the Nasdaq’s AI trade remains ferocious — Nvidia, set to report Wednesday, now constitutes 9% of the entire S&P 500 by market cap and has contributed nearly 20% of the index’s total year-to-date gains. On the other, a global bond rout accelerated last week, driving the 10-year Treasury yield above 4.6% for the first time in 15 months. The catalyst is not hard to identify: April CPI and PPI both came in scalding hot, with energy prices from the still-unresolved US-Iran conflict pushing inflation to a near three-year high. Traders have fully priced out any Federal Reserve rate cut in 2026 and are beginning to price in a hike — a seismic shift that has hammered gold, crushed crypto, and kept USD pinned near multi-week highs.
The week’s dominant catalyst is Nvidia’s Q1 earnings on Wednesday, expected to report around $70–78 billion in revenue — roughly 60% year-on-year growth — with analysts from Bank of America, KeyBanc and Oppenheimer all raising price targets into the print. Any miss, or cautious data-centre guidance, could trigger broad tech de-risking. Meanwhile, two macro landmines sit mid-week: the Fed’s April FOMC minutes (Wednesday) and Walmart’s Q1 print (Thursday), both capable of reshaping the inflation narrative. Monday’s session is also the first full trading day under incoming Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, whose Senate confirmation advanced from committee on April 29 and whose dovish leanings are colliding with the hottest US CPI print in 33 months.
The geopolitical backdrop remains the session’s primary risk factor. Trump rejected Iran’s revised peace proposal over the weekend as “totally unacceptable.” A reported White House Situation Room meeting on Tuesday will assess military options against Tehran — a headline that could move crude $5 in either direction in seconds. A separate drone strike targeted the UAE’s sole nuclear facility on Sunday. Brent is trading above $109 and WTI near $105. The IEA warned Monday that commercial oil inventories have only weeks remaining at current depletion rates. This is not a market where geopolitical surprises are easily absorbed.
Market-Moving Headlines
High-impact catalysts driving US session pricing at the open
S&P 500 · Nasdaq · Dow — Trade Ideas
AI euphoria vs bond rout — the defining tension for the week of Nvidia earnings
Technical & Fundamental
Macro tension at record levels. The S&P 500 scored its sixth consecutive weekly gain last week — its best streak since 2024 — closing at a new all-time high of 7,432. However, Friday’s reversal (−1.24%) on hot CPI/PPI data and a spike in 10-year yields to 4.59% shows the market is no longer ignoring the inflation narrative. Today the index opens around 7,397, about 35 points below that record close.
The Nvidia binary. Wednesday’s NVDA earnings report is the single biggest binary event this week. Nvidia alone is 9% of the S&P 500’s market cap, and Goldman Sachs notes it accounts for 20% of the index’s 2026 returns. A beat at $70B+ revenue with strong Blackwell GPU guidance could push SPX to 7,450–7,500. A miss or margin guidance miss could trigger a 2–3% selloff toward the 7,280–7,320 support range where the recent breakout originated.
Bond yields are the key macro overlay. The 10-year yield touching 4.6% before pulling back slightly today is a ceiling-setter for equity multiples. If yields re-accelerate above 4.65%–4.70%, the P/E compression trade kicks in across all growth names. Watch for the FOMC minutes Wednesday for signals about the Fed’s tolerance for elevated inflation. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s dovish inclinations are well-known, but he is outnumbered by hawks on the current FOMC.
Technical & Fundamental
Rate sensitivity is back. The Nasdaq’s 4-week +4% surge came on the back of AI trade momentum and a ceasefire-related oil dip. With oil re-accelerating above $105 and 10-year yields testing 4.6%, the duration trade that underpins high-multiple tech stocks faces renewed pressure. Friday’s −1.54% session underlined how quickly the narrative can reverse.
Pre-NVDA positioning risk. Retail sentiment on Stocktwits is “extremely bullish” on QQQ and SPY — a contrarian caution signal. The risk of a “sell the news” dynamic on Wednesday’s Nvidia print is elevated after a 7-week rally. Options markets show elevated implied volatility on NVDA with a ±8% expected move post-earnings. If NVDA disappoints, the ripple effects through AMD, TSMC, Broadcom and the broader AI basket will be immediate.
Monday.com’s 26% surge is a near-term positive for enterprise SaaS sentiment. Regeneron’s −10.5% on trial failure and UNH’s −4.8% are drag factors but sector-specific rather than systemic. The real watch is NVDA Wednesday and FOMC minutes.
USD/JPY · EUR/USD · GBP/USD — Trade Ideas
Dollar hawkishness, yield differentials and geopolitical risk premiums dominate the FX landscape
Technical & Fundamental
The divergence trade is back on. With US markets now pricing in a Federal Reserve rate hike by December 2026 — and even a 50%+ chance of a hike before year-end according to futures — while the Bank of Japan remains in a “gradual normalisation” mode with rates at 0.5%, the yield differential between US and Japanese rates has widened to its highest levels since early 2025. USD/JPY is benefiting directly from this carry dynamic.
BoJ intervention risk at 152+. The Japanese Finance Ministry has previously drawn a line near 160.00, though verbal warnings tend to emerge in the 150–152 zone. Today’s session has the pair at 148.20 — comfortably below intervention range — giving bulls room to run before the 150 psychological level. Japan’s 30-year JGB hit an all-time high today, suggesting domestic bond stress could eventually force BoJ action, but that is likely a June–July story.
Oil inflation reinforces USD. The energy-driven inflation narrative is explicitly bullish for the US dollar via Fed hawkishness repricing. Geopolitical risk also strengthens the USD’s safe-haven appeal. Unless a credible Iran ceasefire headline breaks, the path of least resistance for USD/JPY remains to the upside toward 150.
Technical & Fundamental
Six consecutive losing sessions. EUR/USD’s slide from 1.1820 to 1.1620 has been driven overwhelmingly by USD strength rather than Euro structural weakness. The DXY (Dollar Index) is approaching its highest level since early April at 99.35+, powered by the Fed’s hawkish repricing. The ECB has not provided any fresh hawkish catalyst to offset dollar demand, and with Lagarde leaning cautious on further rate changes, the rate differential story squarely favours the dollar.
Today’s modest bounce (+0.15%) is technically weak. The pair is attempting to retrace to the 200-day SMA at ~1.1682 — a level that was prior support and has now flipped to resistance. A rejection there is the higher-probability outcome given macro headwinds. Bears should watch that level carefully. Only a sustained close above 1.1745 (year-open resistance) would meaningfully challenge the bearish case.
Key risk to the short: Iran ceasefire headlines. Any credible peace deal announcement would compress oil prices sharply, reduce Fed hawkishness expectations, and weaken the dollar — potentially sending EUR/USD back toward 1.1750–1.1820 in a single session. Position sizing is critical ahead of any Trump/Iran headline.
WTI Crude · Gold — Trade Ideas
Oil and gold moving in unusual divergence — energy fear driving crude, Fed hawkishness suppressing gold
Technical & Fundamental
The IEA’s warning changes the calculus. IEA Executive Director Fatih Birol stated Monday that commercial oil inventories — already depleted by the Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz closure — have only “a few weeks” remaining at current rates of depletion. The release of strategic petroleum reserves (SPR) has added 2.5 million barrels per day to the market, but Birol warned “these reserves are not endless.” The arrival of summer driving season and Northern Hemisphere agricultural demand will only accelerate the drawdown.
Geopolitical premium will not decompress easily. Trump rejected Iran’s revised proposal Sunday and a Situation Room meeting Tuesday to discuss military options adds further upside tail risk. The 52-week WTI range spans $54.98 to $117.63 — there is a great deal of room above current price if the Hormuz closure deepens. Conversely, any credible ceasefire headline is a fast $5–8 downside risk — do not overstay long positions into such news.
Supply side confirms bullish structure. Brent crude is above $109, a $4 WTI-Brent spread that reflects European import anxiety. US crude inventories data (Wednesday EIA report) will be closely watched; last week’s API data showed a draw of over 4 million barrels.
Technical & Fundamental
Gold is caught between two regimes. On one hand, the geopolitical environment — a shooting war in the Middle East, nuclear facility drone strikes, a US president talking about military options — is textbook gold-supportive. On the other, the Fed’s hawkish repricing toward a potential 2026 rate hike is the single most powerful short-term headwind for a non-yielding asset. Gold fell from $4,713 to $4,480 last week as yields surged — a nearly $240 drawdown in five sessions.
The $4,492–$4,540 zone is now the key technical battleground. This level represents the confluence of the 2026 low-week close, the 2025 high-day close, the May opening-range low, and the 61.8% retracement of the October advance. Gold has so far defended this area, staging a modest recovery to $4,567. A sustained hold here with a bullish daily close would set up a move toward $4,742 (the 61.8% Fibonacci retracement of the April decline).
The bull case remains structural. Central banks globally continue to accumulate gold as a USD reserve alternative. Any deterioration in the Iran situation, or a credible threat to the USD’s reserve currency status from the US debt/deficit trajectory, would revive the primary uptrend. The long-term bias remains bullish; the current correction is a tactical opportunity within a structural bull market.
US Session Data Releases — Week of 18 May
Five high-impact events including FOMC minutes and Nvidia earnings that will shape the macro narrative
| Date & Time (ET) | Event | Prior | Forecast | Actual | Impact | FX / Asset Implication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon 18 May · All Day | 🇺🇸 G7 Finance Ministers Meeting (Paris) | — | — | Ongoing | High | Treasury Sec. Bessent in Paris; discussion of bond market volatility and oil supply emergency. Any SPR coordinated release statement = oil bearish flash |
| Tue 19 May · 10:00 | 🇺🇸 Pending Home Sales (Apr) | −2.1% | +0.3% | Pending | Med | High mortgage rates from the bond rout are hammering housing; miss likely confirms rate-sensitive sector pain. USD neutral |
| Tue 19 May · TBA | 🇺🇸 White House Situation Room — Iran Military Options Review | — | — | Unscheduled | High | Any leak of military escalation decision = WTI +$5–8, USD strength, SPX −1.5–2%. Peace signal = opposite. Biggest geopolitical binary of the week |
| Wed 20 May · 14:00 | 🇺🇸 Fed FOMC Minutes (April Meeting) | Hold 3.5–3.75% | — | Pending | High | Market will scrutinise dissenter language from 4 officials. Any hint of hike bias = USD +0.5%, yields spike, gold/equities sold. Dovish surprise = dollar weakness |
| Wed 20 May · After Close | 🇺🇸 Nvidia (NVDA) Q1 FY2027 Earnings | Rev $39.3B | $70–78B | Pending | High | Biggest single-stock binary of the year. Beat = SPX +1.5%, Nasdaq +2%. Miss = SPX −2%, Nasdaq −3%. Options pricing ±8% move on NVDA itself. Watch Blackwell GPU shipment guidance |
| Wed 20 May · After Close | 🇺🇸 EIA Crude Oil Inventory | −4.1M bbl | −2.5M bbl | Pending | Med | After IEA’s inventory warning, a larger-than-expected draw would push WTI toward $108–110. Build unlikely but if realised, WTI −$3 |
| Thu 21 May · Before Open | 🇺🇸 Walmart (WMT) Q1 FY2026 Earnings | Rev $180.5B | $185.2B | Pending | High | Key barometer of US consumer under energy price shock. Any margin guidance cut citing higher fuel/logistics costs = stagflation signal = bearish for SPX. Consumer Staples sector watch |
| Thu 21 May · 08:30 | 🇺🇸 Initial Jobless Claims | 228K | 225K | Pending | Med | Labour market remains tight despite inflation. A surprise spike above 240K = recession fear, treasuries bid, USD sold. Below 220K = stagflation combo confirmed |
| Fri 22 May · 09:45 | 🇺🇸 Flash PMI (Manufacturing + Services, May) | Mfg 50.2 · Svc 53.1 | Mfg 49.8 · Svc 52.5 | Pending | High | First May activity read. Energy shock hitting manufacturing PMI below 50 = stagflation confirmation, bearish equities. Services resilience = supports USD. Key week-close data |
US Earnings Calendar — Week of 18 May 2026
The most earnings-dense week of Q1 season with Nvidia, Walmart and Target as the marquee catalysts
| Date | Company | Index / Sector | Sector | Risk | Key Watch |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mon 18 May | monday.com (MNDY) | Nasdaq · SaaS | Enterprise Software | BEAT | Already reported: revenue $351.3M, +24% YoY, beat driven by AI platform. Stock +26%. Bullish signal for enterprise SaaS heading into NVDA week |
| Mon 18 May | Regeneron (REGN) | Nasdaq · Biotech | Biotechnology | MISS | Phase 3 melanoma trial failed primary endpoint. Stock −10.5%. Piper Sandler cut price target to $855 from $875. Biotech-specific event, limited contagion |
| Wed 20 May | Nvidia (NVDA) | Nasdaq · S&P 500 | Semiconductors / AI | High | Revenue consensus $70–78B (+60% YoY). Blackwell GPU shipments (150–200K QoQ target). Data centre guidance is the key variable. Analysts: BofA $320, KeyBanc $300, Oppenheimer $265. Market-mover of the year |
| Wed 20 May | TJX Companies (TJX) | S&P 500 · NYSE | Discount Retail | Med | Off-price retail often outperforms in high-inflation, value-conscious consumer environment. Watch for trade tariff commentary on sourcing costs and consumer spend trends |
| Thu 21 May | Walmart (WMT) | Dow · S&P 500 | Consumer Staples / Retail | High | Q1 revenue consensus $185.2B. The critical signal will be gross margin commentary around energy/logistics costs and consumer trade-down behaviour. If WMT cuts FY guidance citing energy inflation = stagflation read for the whole market |
| Thu 21 May | Target (TGT) | S&P 500 · NYSE | Consumer Discretionary / Retail | High | More discretionary-skewed than Walmart — expect greater pressure from energy-shocked consumers trading down or cutting spend. Any same-store sales miss + guidance cut would weigh on the Consumer Discretionary sector broadly |
| Thu 21 May | ServiceNow (NOW) | Nasdaq · S&P 500 | Enterprise SaaS / AI | Med | Key AI-workflow bellwether; monday.com’s beat bodes well. Watch AI subscription attach rates and guidance for FY enterprise spending budgets. Could see a monday.com-like pop on a beat |
“The market’s fundamental paradox this week: Nvidia’s AI-driven valuation requires the very cheap money that the energy war is now destroying. If yields stay above 4.5% and oil above $100, the AI multiple eventually contracts — and Nvidia’s Wednesday print won’t be able to hold the line forever.” CSFX Research Desk · 18 May 2026 · 09:30 ET · US Session Open
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