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Every story this week traces back to a single Truth Social post. President Trump's threat — and then five-day pause — on Iranian energy strikes sent oil, stocks, the dollar, and gold lurching in opposite directions within hours. Understanding the mechanics of that whiplash, and what it means for portfolios that are already nursing four straight losing weeks, is the only thing that matters right now.
Top Stories
Trump Pauses Iran Strike Threat — Markets Surge, But the Five-Day Clock Is Already Ticking
The Dow surged more than 630 points, the Nasdaq climbed 1.4%, and the S&P 500 gained 1.2% on Monday after President Trump said he had instructed the Pentagon to postpone threatened strikes on Iranian power plants for five days following "very good and productive conversations" — a claim Iranian state media disputed. Oil futures retreated sharply alongside Treasury yields, the U.S. dollar, and gold as risk appetite flooded back into equities, particularly beaten-down technology and consumer discretionary names. The relief is real, but Freedom Capital Markets Chief Market Strategist Jay Woods framed it precisely: the five-day window is short enough to cap how far any rally can run, since the same threat re-arms automatically if talks collapse.
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Oil Futures Volume Spiked Minutes Before Trump's Post — Raising Uncomfortable Questions
CNBC reported that volume in stock and oil futures surged noticeably in the minutes before Trump's Truth Social post about Iran went live, a pattern that will likely draw regulatory scrutiny. Meanwhile, the UAE's oil chief called Iranian actions in the Strait of Hormuz "economic terrorism against every nation," underscoring that even a five-day pause does not dissolve the underlying supply-disruption risk that drove crude sharply higher through last week's four-day losing streak in equities.
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AI Attracted $171B of February's Record $189B VC Haul — But Three Firms Took 83% of It
A Crunchbase report revealed that global venture capital hit a record $189 billion in February, with AI startups capturing $171 billion — more than 90% of the total — almost entirely concentrated in OpenAI ($110B at a $730B valuation), Anthropic ($30B at $380B), and Waymo ($16B at $126B). Those three rounds alone equaled one-third of all VC deployed in the entirety of 2025, which raises a critical portfolio question: the AI thesis is not broadly distributing wealth across the sector; it is concentrating it at the very top of the private market where retail investors have no access.
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Fed's Goolsbee Warns of "Fraught but Intense" Inflation Climate — Rate Cuts Pushed Further Out
Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said Monday he is worried about inflation persisting in what he called a "fraught but intense" economic environment, echoing earlier caution from Fed Governor Waller, who last week urged patience and suggested rate cuts are possible "later in the year" — a phrase that now sounds like the back half of 2026 at the earliest. This matters for this week's relief rally because any lasting equity recovery requires not just geopolitical calm but also a Fed pivot that currently looks like it is receding, not approaching.
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Nvidia Beat, Stocks Fell: Why "Buy the Earnings" No Longer Works in This Market
In late February, Nvidia reported a blowout quarter — CEO Jensen Huang said customers are "racing to invest in AI" — yet shares fell 5.5% the next session, dragging the Nasdaq down 1.2% and making Information Technology the worst S&P 500 sector of the day. The pattern repeats a lesson that has defined 2026: when sentiment is already stretched by macro uncertainty (tariffs, AI disruption fears, geopolitical risk), even exceptional fundamental results cannot override the prevailing mood — and investors who bought on earnings expectations absorbed the full downside.
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Income Strategy Tip
Use the Iran Relief Rally to Sell Covered Calls on Energy Exposure — Before the Five-Day Window Closes
Monday's oil selloff punished energy stocks that spiked last week on Strait of Hormuz fears. That spike-and-retrace pattern creates a specific, time-boxed opportunity: if you hold shares in an energy ETF such as XLE (Energy Select Sector SPDR), the combination of still-elevated implied volatility (inflated by last week's geopolitical premium) and the hard five-day diplomatic deadline creates unusually rich short-dated option premiums. Here is the exact three-step execution:
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Step 1 — Confirm your entry position. You need to already hold at least
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