Sunday, May 31, 2026
☀️ A sea turtle that hatched in 1962 is still swimming somewhere in the Pacific right now, having outlived most of the people who were born that year—a quiet reminder that patience and persistence beat almost everything.
May 29, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Dell surged nearly 40% in extended trading Thursday after delivering a strong sales outlook tied to rapid expansion of AI data centers. The chipmaker's guidance signaled accelerating demand for servers and infrastructure supporting generative AI workloads, a structural tailwind that's reshaping capital allocation across the semiconductor and cloud computing sectors. The move reflects institutional conviction that AI capex cycles will sustain through 2026-2027, offsetting concerns about margin compression from competitive pricing.
Oil prices collapsed in May, with WTI crude falling 16.2% to $87.36 and Brent falling 17.46% to $91.12, marking the largest monthly declines since the 2020 pandemic crash. The move was driven entirely by reports of a tentative US-Iran ceasefire agreement that would extend the current truce by 60 days and allow unrestricted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz once Iran clears mines within 30 days. The agreement remains unsigned—Trump has not formally endorsed it—but markets are already pricing in eventual relief from the energy shock that's dominated 2026 and kept inflation elevated. Analysts warn that even if the deal is finalized, oil recovery will be slow: mines must be cleared, damaged infrastructure repaired, and shut-in production restarted, with tanker delays also limiting supply restoration. The collapse in oil prices is a major tailwind for the Fed's inflation fight and could unlock rate cuts in late 2026 if the ceasefire holds.
Japan's Nikkei 225 surged 2.53% Friday to 66,329.50, hitting record highs as investors cheered the Iran ceasefire deal and renewed enthusiasm for AI semiconductor stocks. The broader Topix Index climbed 1.41% to 3,957. For Japan, an economy heavily reliant on energy imports, the prospect of a durable reduction in Middle East tensions and eventual reopening of the Strait of Hormuz is a major structural tailwind. Lower oil prices will ease inflation, reduce import costs, and boost corporate margins—particularly for exporters and energy-intensive manufacturers. Technology and AI-related shares led the advance, with semiconductor and electronic component manufacturers surging on renewed enthusiasm for the AI build-out and easing of supply chain concerns linked to the conflict. Domestic data also supported the rally: Japan's retail sales expanded at the fastest pace in a year, and industrial production unexpectedly increased.
The Federal Reserve held the target range for the federal funds rate at 3.50-3.75% at its April 28-29 meeting in an 8-4 vote—the most divided FOMC since October 1992. Fed Governor Stephen Miran dissented in favor of a 25 basis point cut, while three other members (Kashkari, Hammack, Logan) objected to the statement's 'easing bias,' signaling they prefer a more hawkish stance. Chair Powell cited persistent inflation pressures (headline PCE at 3.8% YoY) and geopolitical uncertainty as reasons to hold. The hawkish dissents signal internal divisions over whether inflation risks justify holding longer, with markets now pricing 98% odds of a June hold and only ~42% odds of any cut by year-end. The next FOMC meeting on June 16-17 will include updated economic projections and a dot plot, which will provide clarity on the Fed's rate path for the remainder of 2026.
Reports emerged Friday that the US and Iran have reached a tentative memorandum of understanding to extend their current ceasefire by 60 days and begin formal talks on Tehran's nuclear program, with a critical provision allowing unrestricted shipping through the Strait of Hormuz once Iran clears mines within 30 days. The deal remains unsigned—President Trump has not formally endorsed the terms, and Vice President JD Vance cautioned that it remains uncertain whether or when an agreement could be finalized—but markets reacted immediately, with oil prices collapsing (WTI -1.5%, Brent -1.7%), yields falling sharply (10Y -4 bps), and equities rallying on lower inflation expectations. The ceasefire, if it holds, would restore roughly one-fifth of global oil and LNG flows that have been disrupted since the conflict began in February, potentially easing the energy shock that's kept the Fed pinned at 3.50-3.75% and inflation elevated at 3.8% YoY. However, analysts warn that any recovery in flows will be slow—mines must be cleared, damaged infrastructure repaired, and shut-in production restarted—meaning oil could remain elevated through mid-2026 even if the deal is finalized. The agreement signals a potential inflection point in the 2026 macro narrative: if Trump approves and the Strait reopens, the Fed's inflation dilemma eases, unlocking rate cuts in late 2026 or early 2027. If Trump rejects or the deal collapses, oil could spike again, forcing the Fed to hold longer and pressuring growth.
💡 The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow waterway between Iran and Oman through which roughly 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows. When the US-Iran conflict escalated in February, shipping was effectively blocked, creating a supply shock that sent oil prices to 16-month highs and fueled inflation fears. A reopening would restore supply, lower prices, and ease pressure on the Fed to keep rates high.
Dell Technologies surged nearly 40% in extended trading Thursday after delivering a strong sales outlook tied to rapid expansion of AI data centers. The company's guidance signaled accelerating demand for servers, storage, and networking infrastructure supporting generative AI workloads, a structural tailwind that's reshaping capital allocation across the semiconductor and cloud computing sectors. The move reflects institutional conviction that AI capex cycles will sustain through 2026-2027, offsetting concerns about margin compression from competitive pricing and the normalization of GPU availability. Dell's strength is a leading indicator for the broader AI infrastructure complex—Broadcom, Nvidia, and cloud providers like AWS and Azure all benefit from sustained data center spending.
💡 Data center capex refers to spending by cloud providers and enterprises on servers, GPUs, and networking equipment to train and run AI models. This spending has become the largest driver of semiconductor demand in 2026, offsetting weakness in consumer electronics and PCs.
American Airlines announced Friday that it will deploy SpaceX's Starlink satellite constellation for in-flight Wi-Fi on over 500 narrow-body aircraft, the latest major aviation win for the service. American chose Starlink over Amazon's Project Kuiper, which was optioned by Delta Air Lines. Starlink has now secured commitments from United, Southwest, Alaska, and American—collectively representing the majority of US domestic capacity—signaling institutional confidence in satellite internet reliability and speed. The deal is a validation of SpaceX's satellite infrastructure and a headwind for traditional in-flight Wi-Fi providers like Viasat and Intelsat, which rely on ground-based networks with higher latency and lower bandwidth.
💡 Starlink is a constellation of low-earth-orbit (LEO) satellites that provide broadband internet globally. LEO satellites have lower latency (delay) and higher bandwidth than traditional geostationary satellites, making them suitable for real-time applications like video streaming and video calls on aircraft.
Solana is testing Alpenglow, its most significant consensus protocol change since the network launched in 2020. The upgrade replaces Proof of History and TowerBFT with new components—Votor for faster voting and Rotor for data relay—designed to deliver near-instant finality of 100-150 milliseconds and improve performance under high load. Community validators approved the upgrade with over 98% support last year, and mainnet rollout is targeted for later in 2026. If successful, Alpenglow could strengthen Solana's position for high-frequency decentralized finance and consumer applications, addressing historical concerns about network reliability and outages that damaged institutional confidence in 2022.
💡 Finality refers to the time it takes for a blockchain transaction to be confirmed and irreversible. Faster finality enables real-time applications like high-frequency trading and payments. Solana's current finality is ~400ms; Alpenglow targets 100-150ms, competitive with traditional payment networks.
Spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded their ninth consecutive day of outflows on May 29, with net redemptions totaling approximately $2 billion over the past two weeks. The outflow streak signals cooling institutional demand despite BTC's 42.8% YTD gain and recent strength above $73,900. In contrast, Solana ETFs (BSOL, FSOL) recorded net inflows of $15.6 million in a recent week, with Fidelity and Bitwise products leading activity, while XRP ETFs attracted $35 million in inflows from May 20-29. The divergence suggests institutional capital is rotating out of Bitcoin into alternative layer-1 blockchains and emerging narratives—Solana's Alpenglow upgrade and institutional adoption (Forward Industries now holds 6.9M SOL), and XRP's regulatory clarity following the SEC's settlement with Ripple in 2023.
💡 Spot ETFs hold the actual asset (Bitcoin) rather than futures contracts, making them accessible to traditional investors who cannot hold crypto directly. Outflows indicate redemptions—investors selling their ETF shares and withdrawing cash, a bearish signal for price momentum.
JPMorgan CEO Jamie Dimon escalated the stablecoin regulatory debate Thursday, criticizing Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong and warning that the current CLARITY Act framework could ultimately fail if stablecoin issuers are allowed to offer yield-bearing rewards that resemble bank deposits. Dimon argued that banks and crypto firms should not have asymmetric regulatory treatment—if stablecoin issuers can offer yield without deposit insurance or capital requirements, they gain an unfair competitive advantage. Armstrong countered that stablecoins are not deposits and should not be subject to banking regulations. The clash reflects a fundamental tension in crypto regulation: traditional finance wants to preserve the banking system's regulatory moat, while crypto firms argue that decentralized finance should operate under different rules. The CLARITY Act, currently in Congress, aims to clarify stablecoin regulation, but the debate over yield-bearing rewards could determine whether the bill passes or stalls.
💡 Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies pegged to a fiat currency (usually the US dollar) and designed to maintain a stable price. Yield-bearing stablecoins offer interest payments to holders, similar to savings accounts. Banks argue this resembles deposit-taking and should require banking licenses; crypto firms argue stablecoins are not deposits and should be unregulated.
Andrew Gault, a venture capitalist who funded the quantum hardware labs now threatening Bitcoin's security, warned this week that the crypto industry is looking in the wrong place when assessing quantum risk. Most discussions focus on protecting private keys—the cryptographic secrets that unlock wallets—but Gault argues the real vulnerability is the cryptographic signatures that validate transactions on the blockchain. If quantum computers become powerful enough to break ECDSA (the elliptic curve algorithm Bitcoin uses), attackers could forge signatures and steal coins without ever accessing private keys, a vulnerability that's harder to patch than most assume. Google's security team moved in the same direction in March, flagging signature forgery as a more pressing quantum threat than key theft. The timeline remains uncertain—most experts estimate 10-20 years before quantum computers are powerful enough to threaten Bitcoin—but the debate highlights a blind spot in crypto security: the industry has focused on hardware wallets and key management, but the blockchain's cryptographic foundation itself may be the weak link.
💡 ECDSA (Elliptic Curve Digital Signature Algorithm) is the cryptographic standard Bitcoin uses to sign transactions. A quantum computer running Shor's algorithm could theoretically break ECDSA in polynomial time, allowing attackers to forge signatures. This is different from brute-forcing private keys, which would take exponentially longer even for quantum computers.