Close Menu
Kayden Chiew

    Subscribe to Updates

    Subscribe to my email newsletter to get the latest posts delivered right to your email. Pure inspiration

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
    Kayden Chiew
    • About Me
    • My Services
    • Free Resource
    • Contact Me
    • Blog
      • Crypto
      • Forex
      • Us Market
    • Shop
    • Calendar
    Schedule a Call
    Kayden Chiew
    SCHEDULE A CALL
    You are at:Home»Us Market»Stocks Rise, Oil Slides as Investor Concerns About Israel-Iran Conflict Ease; AMD Leads Tech Rally, Defense Contractors Drop
    Us Market

    Stocks Rise, Oil Slides as Investor Concerns About Israel-Iran Conflict Ease; AMD Leads Tech Rally, Defense Contractors Drop

    kaydenchiewBy kaydenchiewJune 16, 20250014 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Stocks rise, oil slides as investor concerns about israel iran conflict
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    EchoStar Soars on Report of Trump Intervention on Spectrum

    7 minutes ago

    Dish Network owner EchoStar (SATS) shares skyrocketed 49% on Monday following a report that President Donald Trump had intervened to help the satellite TV provider hold onto its valuable spectrum licenses.

    Bloomberg reported Friday that the president met with EchoStar Chairman Charlie Ergen and Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Brendan Carr at the White House and called on them to work out a deal. The report noted that the FCC had launched an investigation last month into whether the company was meeting certain obligations for its wireless and satellite rights. The Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that EchoStar was considering filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to protect it from the possibility of losing those licenses.

    Bloomberg said Trump told Ergen and Carr he didn’t want a major American company to go bankrupt, as it would cause uncertainties for other firms. 

    EchoStar has missed several debt interest payments recently, writing in a regulatory filing that the FCC spectrum threats have “effectively frozen our ability to make decisions” about how to grow and invest in its Boost Mobile network.

    With today’s huge gain, shares of EchoStar moved into positive territory year-to-date.

    EchoStar shares are now up nearly 10% since the start of 2025, outpacing the performance of the S&P 500 over that period.

    TradingView


    -Bill McColl

    MGM Resorts Stock Jumps on Lifted BetMGM Outlook

    42 minutes ago

    MGM Resorts International (MGM) shares surged Monday as the casino operator and London-traded firm Entain lifted their full-year outlook for their co-owned BetMGM sports betting and iGaming operator.

    “BetMGM’s positive momentum seen during 1Q 2025 has continued for the period 2Q 2025 to June 13, 2025, with strong Net Revenue growth across both iGaming and Online Sports, driven by handle growth,” MGM and Entain said. The firms added that trading “is broadly consistent with” the 34% year-over-year revenue growth in the first quarter.

    As a result, the companies now expect BetMGM’s fiscal 2025 revenue of “at least $2.6 billion,” up from the prior outlook range of $2.4 billion to $2.5 billion, and EBITDA of “at least $100 million,” compared to “EBITDA positive” previously.

    Shares of MGM Resorts and its rivals rose sharply on Monday but remain in negative territory for the past 12 months, significantly underperforming the benchmark S&P 500 index.

    TradingView


    MGM Resorts shares closed 8% higher on Monday. The news also lifted shares of gaming rivals Wynn Resorts (WYNN) and Las Vegas Sands (LVS), with both rising more than 5% to join MGM Resorts among the top S&P 500 gainers.

    -Aaron Rennie

    Roku Rallies on Amazon Ad Partnership

    1 hr 13 min ago

    Roku (ROKU) shares popped Monday after the company announced a new partnership with Amazon (AMZN) Ads it claims will give advertisers access to more than 80% of households with connected televisions.

    Shares of Roku were up nearly 10% in recent trading, while Amazon stock added 2%, amid a broader market rebound from Friday’s losses.

    Roku said the partnership with Amazon Ads will allow advertisers to reach an estimated 80 million connected TVs in the U.S. across The Roku Channel, Amazon Prime Video, and other streaming services available on Roku and Fire TV. It works by allowing Amazon’s demand-side platform to recognize logged-in viewers on the Roku operating system, the company said. 

    The technology is expected to be made available to advertisers using Amazon DSP by the fourth quarter of 2025.

    With Monday’s gains, shares of Roku have added about 50% of their value over the past 12 months.

    -Andrew Kessel

    Market Sanguine About Middle East Tension—Is That Normal?

    1 hr 38 min ago

    Investors were sanguine on Monday about the risk of conflict between Israel and Iran spiraling and causing an oil-supply shock that would materially affect the global economy.

    Even amid volatile trading on Friday, there was plenty of evidence that investors weren’t that concerned about the conflict spiraling out of control. High yield credit spreads increased just 2 basis points, a sign of modest risk aversion, and the MSCI World Index closed just 1% off its all-time high. 

    It’s not out of the ordinary for markets to quickly shrug off major geopolitical events. The S&P 500 tends to fall about 6% in the three weeks after a geopolitical shock before recovering all of those losses in the following three weeks, according to a recent survey by Deutsche Bank analysts Parag Thatte and Binky Chadha. And with equity positioning historically low by their measure, a bigger sell-off was even more unlikely today. 

    Geopolitics has had a sustained impact on the stock market only when it’s affected the real economy, whether by slowing growth or lifting inflation, Deutsche Bank analyst Henry Allen said in a note on Monday. There are only a few examples of oil shocks having a meaningful impact on stocks, including the oil embargo of the 1970s and Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990. 

    The most recent example of a geopolitical disruption to the stock market is Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022, which bears some troubling resemblance to today. Inflation was already running above target when Russia’s invasion drove oil prices up more than 30% in a matter of weeks. The oil- supply shock fueled an acceleration of already-elevated inflation, likely forcing central banks to raise interest rates faster and higher than they would have otherwise, Allen’s report said. 

    Inflation has moderated considerably since hitting a 40-year high in June 2022. Consumer prices increased 2.4% year-over-year in May, just slightly above the Federal Reserve’s 2% target. However, President Donald Trump’s tariffs threaten to raise prices, and their inflationary impact could be exacerbated by escalation in the Middle East. 

    “The inflation risk really matters, because the problem with higher inflation is it will restrict central banks from cutting rates, as is currently priced,” Allen wrote. The majority of investors are currently pricing in rate cuts of at least 100 basis points by the end of next year. Resurgent or sticky inflation would leave the Fed little room to cut interest rates if tariffs and high oil prices weighed on growth or the labor market.

    -Colin Laidley

    AMD Soars as Piper Sandler Upgrades After AI Event

    2 hr 21 min ago

    Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) shares popped Monday as Piper Sandler analysts raised their price target for the stock coming out of the chipmaker’s  “Advancing AI” event. 

    Piper raised its target to $140 from $125 and maintained an “overweight” rating for AMD stock. Shares of AMD were up more than 9% at around $127 in recent trading, pacing S&P 500 advancers.

    The analysts came away “enthused” by the firm’s newly unveiled Helios server rack architecture, which it called “pivotal” for the growth of AMD Instinct GPUs. Helios will combine next-generation AMD MI400 chips into one larger system, the company said, and is expected in 2026. 

    OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and AMD CEO Lisa Su speaking before a Senate Committee last month.

    Alex Wong / Getty Images


    AMD highlighted its partnerships with ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Meta Platforms (META), Oracle (ORCL), Microsoft (MSFT), and others at the event. Bank of America analysts believe there’s another high-profile partner announcement to come: Amazon (AMZN).

    Amazon Web Services (AWS) was “a key sponsor for the event,” BofA said. However, AWS typically uses its own events to announce new engagements, making a future reveal likely, the bank added.

    BofA maintained a “buy” rating and price target of $130 following the event. For comparison, the analyst consensus price target from Visible Alpha is about $124.

    -Andrew Kessel

    Sarepta Therapeutics Plunge as 2nd Patient Dies Taking Drug

    3 hr 8 min ago

    Shares of Sarepta Therapeutics (SRPT) plummeted after the biotech company reported a second patient taking its Elevidys drug for Duchenne muscular dystrophy died of acute liver failure (ALF).

    Sarepta said both of those who died had non-ambulatory Duchenne, and it has temporarily suspended shipments of Elevidys for such patients. In addition, it will “immediately convene an independent group of leading experts in Duchenne and liver health to consider an enhanced immunosuppression regimen for ELEVIDYS.”

    The company is also pausing a study evaluating Elevidys’ efficacy for older ambulatory and non-ambulatory patients with Duchenne.

    Louise Rodino-Klapac, chief science officer and head of research and development at Sarepta, said the firm was taking “immediate, decisive steps to better understand and mitigate the risk of acute liver failure” in those taking Elevidys.

    Back in March, Sarepta shares also sank after it announced the first ALF death of a patient on Elevidys. At that time, the company noted that acute liver injury was a possible side effect of the treatment, and was gathering information and planned to “update the prescribing information to appropriately represent this reported liver failure event and any additional monitoring requirements.”

    Sarepta shares, which hit their lowest level since 2016 on Monday, have lost more than 80% of their value since the start of 2025.

    TradingView


    Shares of Sarepta were recently down 45%, trading at their lowest level in nearly a decade.

    -Bill McColl

    Meta Climbs as Company Set to Launch Ads on What’s App

    4 hr 20 min ago

    Meta Platforms (META) shares climbed Monday as the social media giant said it’s introducing paid advertising to WhatsApp, in a move that could expand its revenue streams.

    In a reversal of WhatsApp’s longtime “no ads” mantra, Meta said Monday that it’s bringing channel subscriptions, promoted channels, and ads to its WhatsApp Updates tab, which the company said attracts about 1.5 billion users daily. The new features are expected to be rolled out globally over the next few months in an attempt to boost Meta’s ad revenue.

    Separately, Oppenheimer analysts raised their price target for the stock to $775 from $665 in a Sunday research note, citing Meta’s improving ad market outlook. The analysts suggested Meta could even see further upside with “higher than expected monetization driven by Instagram, Stories, and video.”

    Meta shares have outperformed Microsoft, Nvidia and other members of the Magnificent Seven group of major technology companies since the start of the year.

    TradingView


    Meta shares were up 2.5% at around $700 in recent trading.The stock has added nearly a fifth of its value since the start of the year, making it the best-performing member of the Magnificent Seven in 2025.

    -Kara Greenberg

    US Steel Jumps as Nippon Steel Set to Complete Acquisition

    5 hr 53 min ago

    United States Steel (X) shares surged Monday, as the Pittsburgh-based company’s takeover by Japan’s Nippon Steel looks set to close following approval by President Donald Trump.

    Trump issued an executive order on Friday green lighting Nippon Steel’s takeover of U.S. Steel after the companies signed a national security agreement, which included the issuance of a so-called golden share to Washington. The companies didn’t elaborate on what the golden share would entail.

    In a post on X over the weekend, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick said the golden share “has powerful terms that directly benefit and protect America, Pennsylvania, the great steelworkers of U.S. Steel, and U.S. manufacturers that will have massively expanded access to domestically produced steel.” The golden share prevents U.S. Steel from many actions without the president’s approval—such as moving the headquarters out of Pittsburgh, transferring jobs outside the U.S., or changing its name, Lutnick wrote.

    The national security agreement also provided for approximately $11 billion in new investments to be made by the companies by 2028. Former President Joe Biden blocked the $14.1 billion takeover by the Tokyo-based steelmaker in the final days of his presidency, citing national security concerns.

    The companies said they have received all the needed regulatory approvals, and “the partnership is expected to be finalized promptly.”

    U.S. Steel shares were up 5% in recent trading. The stock has gained about 60% since the start of 2025.

    -Nisha Gopalan

    Boeing Levels to Watch After Last Week’s Slide

    6 hr 46 min ago

    Boeing (BA) shares inched higher Monday morning after slumping to end last week following news that one of the company’s aircraft was involved in an Air India plane crash on Thursday.

    While air safety experts have said that at this time there is no reason to think a manufacturing or design problem caused the incident, it comes as the aircraft manufacturer faces heightened scrutiny over its production processes following several mishaps involving its planes, including a door plug detaching in midair on an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 flight in January last year.

    Boeing shares fell 4.8% on Thursday and dropped another 1.7% on Friday. The stock still trades about 13% higher since the start of the year. In recent months, the shares have been boosted by optimism that the company could be a beneficiary in a long term trade deal with China and Beijing’s withdrawal of a ruling imposed in early April that barred the country’s airlines from taking delivery of Boeing planes.

    Source: TradingView.com.

    Boeing shares staged a news-driven breakdown from a rising wedge pattern in Thursday’s trading session, potentially setting the stage for a deeper retracement. The selling, which occurred on the highest volume since last October, coincided with the relative strength index falling toward its neutral threshold, signaling accelerating downside momentum.

    Investors should watch crucial support levels on Boeing’s chart around $187 and $163, while also monitoring vital resistance levels near $218 and $245.

    The stock was up 0.7% at just under $202 in recent trading.

    Read the full technical analysis piece here.

    -Timothy Smith

    What to Expect from Fed Meeting This Week

    7 hr 58 min ago

    The Federal Reserve is likely to stick to its “wait-and-see” mantra, setting it on a collision course with the president.

    The Federal Reserve is widely expected to hold its key interest rate steady when the central bank’s policy committee meets Wednesday, possibly provoking more wrath from President Donald Trump, who has repeatedly demand the Fed, which is not under direct control of the White House, cut its benchmark interest rate by an entire percentage point.

    Financial markets are pricing in nearly a 100% chance the Fed will leave the rate unchanged this week, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool, which forecasts rate movements based on Fed funds futures trading data.

    Fed Chair Jerome Powell has come under repeated criticism from President Donald Trump this year for not cutting interest rates.

    Al Drago / Bloomberg / Getty Images


    In recent weeks, Fed officials have said they’re reluctant to lower interest rates from their current elevated levels because they’re concerned Trump’s tariffs will reignite the high inflation that has fallen to within shooting distance of the Fed’s target of a 2% annual rate, after surging in the post-pandemic era. For his part, Trump has frequently browbeaten the Fed for not having cut rates this year, going so far as to call Fed Chair Jerome Powell a “numbskull”.

    A lower fed funds rate could boost the economy and encourage job creation, but it could also take some of the downward pressure off inflation.

    Fed officials have been under a communications “blackout” over the past week in advance of the meeting, but before they went silent, members of the Federal Open Market Committee said they wanted to see how the economy responded to Trump’s tariffs before making any policy moves.

    The tariffs pose a dual threat to the Fed’s dual mandate to keep inflation low and employment high: not only could the import taxes push up prices, but they could hurt the economy, potentially pushing up unemployment. If inflation proves the greater threat, the Fed could keep interest rates higher for longer, or alternatively, could cut rates to rescue the economy if the job market starts to crumble.

    Recent economic data has showed the job market holding steady and inflation staying cool, giving the Fed more reason to bide its time, economists said.

    “No FOMC official has been advocating for a change in policy, so the decision to hold should be easy,” Michael Feroli, chief U.S. economist at JPMorgan Chase, said in a commentary.

    The fed funds rate is the Fed’s main tool for carrying out monetary policy and influencing the economy. The rate affects interest rates at which banks lend money to one another, which influences how much interest they charge for car loans, credit cards, and other debt.

    The Fed cut the rate to near zero to support the economy with easy money during the pandemic, and cranked it up to a two-decade high starting in 2022 to counteract a surge of inflation, holding it there until late 2024. Last year, the Fed began cutting rates because inflation was cooling, but has kept the rate flat since December after Trump’s election shook up the economic outlook.

    -Diccon Hyatt

    AMD Concerns conflict Contractors Defense drop ease Investor IsraelIran Leads Oil rally rise Slides stocks Tech
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleUS Fed meet outcome on Wednesday: Will soft inflation, Trump’s pressure push Jerome Powell to cut rates this time?
    Next Article 5 things to know before the stock market opens Monday June 16
    Cropped whatsapp image 2025 06 04 at 12.54.58 am.jpeg
    kaydenchiew
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Iran’s desire for ceasefire lifts markets, may be one-sided

    June 17, 2025

    Bitcoin Dips As Middle East Tensions Rise With Trump Warning

    June 17, 2025

    Wall Street Rises as Oil Prices Decline

    June 17, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    © 2025 Kayden Chiew. All Rights Reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.