The US stock market pushed to a fresh record high on Wednesday as easing US-Iran tensions pulled oil prices lower and AMD’s blowout AI chip earnings reignited the semiconductor rally.
The S&P 500 climbed 1.14%, the Nasdaq Composite jumped 1.51%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average added 1.10%. A solid ADP private payrolls print reinforced the soft-landing narrative, with broad participation supporting the gains.
The White House is reportedly nearing a one-page memorandum of understanding with Iran that would halt fighting and open nuclear talks, with Iran expected to respond within 48 hours.
The proposed terms include Iran pausing uranium enrichment, accepting UN inspections, and curbing underground sites in exchange for the US easing sanctions and releasing frozen assets.
Both sides would loosen Strait of Hormuz restrictions, opening a 30-day negotiation window. Trump has paused escalation, including plans for naval escorts through the Strait.
The deal proximity compressed crude oil prices, with Brent easing as traders priced in supply normalization. The move lifted risk assets broadly while pressuring energy names.
Lower oil prices also reduce inflationary pressure on consumer spending, which supported the broader equity bid.
Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) jumped 16.29% to a record high after beating Q1 estimates and raising guidance. The chipmaker reported adjusted EPS of $1.37 on $10.25 billion in revenue, with revenue growing 38% year over year on strong data-center AI demand.
Management raised its Q2 outlook, signaling confidence that the AI buildout has further to run.
The print validated the thesis that AI chip spending is broadening beyond Nvidia, lifting semiconductor peers across the board. Super Micro Computer (SMCI) jumped 15.25%, Nvidia (NVDA) rose 4.31%, Lam Research (LRCX) gained 7.17%, Micron Technology (MU) added 2.77%, and Intel (INTC) climbed 2.40%.
That cluster alone drove most of the S&P 500’s advance.
The April ADP private payrolls report showed 109,000 jobs added, beating the consensus expectation of 84,000. The print supports the soft-landing thesis at a time when Fed officials are weighing the inflation impact of recent oil price volatility.
A stronger-than-expected jobs number combined with cooling oil prices gives the Fed cover to maintain its measured policy stance, which markets read as constructive for growth and risk assets.
Market breadth confirmed the move with advancers at 60.3% against decliners at 36.3%. New highs ran at 75.9% versus new lows at 24.1%, and the bull-bear ratio sat at 53% bull against 47% bear. The breadth profile is more constructive than recent sessions and signals broader participation in the AI-led rally.
On the S&P 500 daily chart, the index has rallied steadily since bottoming on March 31, with the move continuing through May 1 before a mild consolidation that resolved higher on the Iran deal hopes. The volume profile through the rally has remained steady, with healthy bar action suggesting proper buying pressure rather than a thin breakout.
The next resistance is 7,399 (0.236 Fibonacci). A daily close above opens the path to 7,540 (0.382 Fibonacci) and 7,654 (0.5 Fibonacci). The 0.618 Fibonacci at 7,767 represents roughly 5% upside potential.
On the downside, weakness emerges below 7,172, with 7,001 as the key psychological floor. A break below 7,001 would weaken the current breakout structure.
Basic Materials led the tape at +3.68%, followed by Technology (+2.08%), Industrials (+1.93%), and Communication Services (+1.63%). Tech leadership reflected the AMD-driven AI chip rally, with semiconductor names absorbing the bulk of inflows.
Industrials gained on aerospace strength, with GE rising 6.04% as ceasefire-related volatility settled. Real Estate (+1.53%) and Consumer Cyclical (+1.41%) advanced as lower oil eased consumer cost pressure and improved discretionary spending visibility.
Energy fell sharply at -3.74% as Brent crude eased on the Iran deal proximity.
Exxon Mobil (XOM) dropped 4.72% and Chevron (CVX) fell 4.58%, with the energy decline directly tied to the supply normalization narrative driving oil lower.
Utilities (-0.73%) underperformed as defensive positioning rotated out in favor of growth and AI-driven tech leadership.
The 48-hour Iran response window is the immediate catalyst. A signed MOU would compress crude further and likely extend AI-led tech leadership. A stalled or rejected response would re-introduce premium into oil and pressure broader risk.
On the technical side, the S&P 500’s path through 7,399 will tell investors whether the AI-driven breakout has the volume to extend toward 7,654 and beyond.