U.S. stock-index futures showed little net movement on Monday evening following a robust trading day on Wall Street, with investors appearing to set aside heightened tensions in the Middle East and concentrate on upcoming bank results.
Futures snapshot: S&P 500 Futures ticked up 0.1% to 6,928.25 points. Nasdaq 100 Futures rose 0.2% to 25,600.75 points by 19:58 ET (23:58 GMT). Dow Jones Futures were mostly unchanged at 48,434.0 points.
Regular session rebound
During the cash session, all three principal U.S. benchmarks closed higher, with the late afternoon rally gaining momentum. The S&P 500 climbed roughly 1.0%, the NASDAQ Composite advanced about 1.2%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained near 0.6%. The late-session strength was led by technology stocks and helped push the S&P 500 back to its highest point since before the Iran war began, effectively erasing the losses tied to the conflict.
Geopolitical backdrop
Sentiment remains influenced by developments in the U.S.-Iran confrontation. Weekend diplomatic talks to end the war collapsed without producing a deal. U.S. President Donald Trump said Iran was seeking to make a deal but emphasized Washington would not accept any arrangement that permits Tehran to acquire a nuclear weapon. The president also announced the U.S. military had initiated a blockade of ships departing Iranian ports. Tehran responded to those moves by warning it could retaliate against ports in neighboring Gulf nations.
Market commentators noted that headlines paint a bleak picture, but traders seem to be adopting a wait-and-see posture rather than presuming a worst-case outcome. "Whilst headlines offer little reason for optimism, markets seem to take more of a wait-and-see approach rather than assuming what will happen. If anything, the glass is still half-full when looking at risk assets," ING analysts said in a note.
Focus on bank earnings
Market attention is shifting to Tuesday, when major U.S. lenders will report quarterly results. JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo are among the banks scheduled to announce, and investors will be parsing details on loan growth, trading revenue, and the effects of sustained higher interest rates.
These upcoming reports follow a mixed earnings release from Goldman Sachs, where softer trading revenue detracted from overall results.
Energy and inflation considerations
Oil prices remained in focus after a brief surge following news of the blockade of Iranian ports. That move has renewed concern about inflationary pressures and the potential for rising energy costs to weigh on corporate profit margins.
Market outlook
Monday’s gains imply investors are, for now, willing to look beyond geopolitical uncertainty. Nonetheless, market participants remain mindful that any escalation in the conflict or disappointing corporate earnings could quickly restore volatility to U.S. equity markets.