Futures

Dow, S&P 500 and Nasdaq Jump as AMD AI Rally Meets Iran Deal Hopes

NEW YORK, May 6, 2026, 07:06 EDT

U.S. stock index futures jumped early Wednesday, with tech stocks at the front of the pack. Traders responded to upbeat guidance from Advanced Micro Devices and potential diplomatic progress between Washington and Tehran aimed at ending the Gulf war. These futures contracts hint at how the cash indexes might kick off the session.

Dow Jones futures jumped 558 points, up 1.13%, as of 6:46 a.m. EDT. S&P 500 futures gained 72 points, or 0.99%. Nasdaq 100 futures tacked on 451 points, for an advance of 1.60%. The Russell 2000 was up 57.7 points, or 2.02%, based on 10-minute delayed figures from Investing.com.

Timing is key here. Wall Street looks set to extend Tuesday’s record streaks for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, after a rally in AI-focused chip names powered the PHLX chip index to a new peak. S&P 500 locked in 7,259.22, Nasdaq closed at 25,326.13, while the Dow stopped at 49,298.25.

Oil prices were the other driver here. A Pakistani source familiar with the talks said the U.S. and Iran were nearing a one-page memo to halt the Gulf conflict, but so far, there’s no official deal. Brent crude slid hard, with global equities moving higher, according to Reuters.

Cheaper oil takes some heat off the inflation and rates argument for stocks, at least temporarily. Brent crude slid 8.44% to $100.60, per Reuters data, and the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield eased to 4.372%.

AMD stole the spotlight among single stocks. The chipmaker set its second-quarter revenue outlook at $11.2 billion, give or take $300 million—topping the $10.52 billion analysts had penciled in, as data-center demand continued to bolster results. “AI compute demand was real,” said Jake Behan, head of capital markets at Direxion, adding that investors’ focus now shifts to whether AMD can convert that into “high-margin revenue.” Reuters

The rally pulled in rivals too. AMD surged almost 18% ahead of the bell, Intel tacked on 6%, and Arm Holdings added 11%. Traders zeroed in on fresh appetite for CPUs—the essential server processors—and GPUs, which are essential for AI model training. According to Reuters, demand is now spilling over into “inference,” as companies put these trained AI models to work, stretching chip demand beyond just GPUs. Reuters

Super Micro Computer tacked on another AI beat. The server manufacturer projected fourth-quarter revenue and adjusted profit topping analyst expectations, pointing to robust demand for its AI servers. CEO Charles Liang also flagged healthy appetite for the company’s wider data-center and cloud software lineup.

Strong earnings have powered the latest leg up in the market. As reporting season moved past the halfway mark, S&P 500 companies looked set for first-quarter earnings growth of 28.2%—the best showing since Q4 of 2021, LSEG data showed, according to Reuters. “It’s been earnings that have driven the move higher,” said Chris Fasciano, chief market strategist at Commonwealth Financial Network. Reuters

The rally, though, is exposed—there’s not much room for slip-ups. Kyle Rodda, senior financial market analyst at Capital.com, noted Wall Street’s current position: markets are leaning on the hope that the Middle East conflict doesn’t flare up again and undercut the earnings-driven run. Should that bet fall apart, Rodda said, risk assets might “sharply in reverse.” Reuters

Next up: jobs data on the domestic front. ADP’s private payrolls report for April lands at 8:15 a.m. ET. According to Reuters, the Labor Department figures due Friday are set to show payroll gains of 62,000, with unemployment holding steady at 4.3%. No signs of labor market weakness, and that keeps prospects for Fed rate cuts slim.

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