Energy Pressures Mount
Alphabet, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, and Apple each reported first-quarter results that significantly exceeded analyst expectations this week, lifting the S&P 500 0.9% and pushing the Magnificent Seven’s blended earnings growth rate to 61%. At the same time, the Federal Reserve held rates unchanged at 3.5%–3.75% in the most contested FOMC vote in over 30 years, with four officials dissenting as a 4.5% PCE inflation reading — more than double the Fed’s 2% target — signaled that rate cuts are off the table for now. Brent crude briefly surpassed $126 per barrel as the Strait of Hormuz blockade entered its ninth week, and the national average at the pump climbed to $4.39 per gallon, up 50% since the conflict began. Despite the pressure, domestic equities held up, with the value-over-growth rotation intact: the Russell 2000 Value index is now up 15.3% year-to-date against just 1.6% for large-cap growth. The week ahead brings the April CPI report, Exxon and Chevron earnings, and a Senate vote on the Federal Reserve’s incoming chairman.


