NEW YORK, April 14, 2026, 18:07 EDT
U.S. stocks jumped on Tuesday, pushing the S&P 500 to within 0.2% of its January record close, as falling oil prices and fresh hopes for renewed U.S.-Iran talks pulled investors back into risk assets. The Nasdaq climbed about 2% and logged its longest winning streak since 2021, while the Dow added nearly 318 points.
The move matters because Wall Street had been bracing for a longer energy shock after Washington moved to blockade Iranian ports. Instead, President Donald Trump said talks with Tehran could resume in Pakistan within two days, reviving bets on a diplomatic off-ramp and a reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil shipping lane.
A second tailwind came from inflation data. The Producer Price Index, or PPI, which tracks prices businesses receive, rose 0.5% in March, below the 1.1% increase economists polled by Reuters had expected; goods prices rose 1.6% while services were flat.
Earnings did the rest. BlackRock said first-quarter net inflows reached $130 billion, helped by record demand for its exchange-traded funds; Citigroup posted its highest quarterly revenue in a decade as trading and deal fees jumped; JPMorgan reported record markets revenue of $11.6 billion, though its shares still slipped.
That mix of diplomacy, softer wholesale inflation and solid results fed a familiar fear of missing out. Burns McKinney of NFJ Investment Group said investors did not want to “miss the rebound,” while Corpay strategist Karl Schamotta said the Trump administration appeared to be looking for an “exit ramp” with Tehran. Reuters
The relief trade spread beyond Wall Street. Europe’s STOXX 600 rose 0.99% and London’s FTSE 100 ended 0.25% higher, while travel and leisure shares gained as crude eased; BP and Shell, by contrast, fell with oil.
Still, the backdrop is fragile. The IMF cut its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.1% and warned the world was already drifting toward a weaker scenario if energy disruptions persist, with global inflation in its reference case seen at 4.4%.
Company chiefs tried to balance confidence with caution. Citi CEO Jane Fraser called the quarter an “exceptionally strong start in 2026,” while BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said the asset manager had one of the strongest starts to a year in its history as clients kept sending money into ETFs and private markets. Citi
But the bet under this rally is plain: that the oil shock fades quickly. Brad Conger, chief investment officer at Hirtle Callaghan, said there is “a lot of complacency” in markets because an off-ramp is already priced in; if crude stays high and bond yields keep climbing, equity valuations could come under pressure again. Reuters
Investors now turn to April 15 for results from Bank of America and Morgan Stanley, more Federal Reserve remarks and any fresh headline from the Middle East. On Tuesday, communication services led S&P 500 sector gains, while Citigroup rose and Wells Fargo fell, a reminder that stock picking is starting to matter again even in a market still driven by geopolitics.