From the archive · Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Wednesday 2026-06-24 - markets as of the 23 June session
Two binary tests resolved in 24 hours and both broke the bull case: the AI trade cracked (semis -8%, Micron -13%) and the Iran deal became real (oil-sanctions waivers, Hormuz reopening, crude deflating). PCE is the last shoe - and the oil it assumed is now falling.
De-risking underway - the AI leg cracks, the geopolitical bid deflates
Two binary tests the market had been circling resolved inside twenty-four hours, and both broke the bull case. The first was the artificial-intelligence trade: ahead of Micron's report, semiconductors had their worst session in months - the chip index fell almost 8%, Micron itself dropped 13%, Nvidia 4% - as fears of an AI price war hit the most stretched trade in the market, dragging the S&P down 1.45% and emerging markets nearly 6% into a broad de-risking. The second was Iran: the United States issued sweeping oil-sanctions waivers - General License X, permitting dollar crude sales through August - as the Strait of Hormuz reopened to traffic, and oil fell to its lowest since before the war. In one session the market lost both its momentum leg and the geopolitical bid that had underpinned energy.
This is the resolution of the very setup the book flagged on Monday, and it cut against consensus on both counts. Our correlation engine had ranked the Iran-to-Hormuz-to-oil chain the single most relevant signal at 0.95 - and it played out, but inverted: the deal landed, transit resumed, and the chain ran in reverse, with oil deflating rather than spiking. Micron, meanwhile, did not miss - it guided to sold-out high-bandwidth-memory capacity and an 81% gross margin - yet the stock fell 13% anyway, the textbook signature of a name priced for perfection meeting a peak-cycle fear (Goldman alone carries a $400 target on memory's cyclicality). When a beat can't hold the tape, the problem is the price, not the print.
The non-obvious read is what this does to Thursday. PCE - the Fed's preferred gauge - was expected to firm toward 4.1% on the back of energy, into a Fed that removed its bias to cut last week. But the energy spike that print assumes is now deflating in real time as Iranian barrels return. The market is braced for the old, oil-up regime; the new, oil-down one argues the feared inflation catalyst could land softer than the tape fears, turning Thursday from a hawkish event into a potential relief. That is the asymmetry few are pricing.
The case against this read deserves a hearing. Micron's sold-out HBM and the structural AI build-out are intact, so the semis selloff may be positioning and a single bearish call rather than fundamentals - a strong report met by a soft PCE could snap the AI trade straight back. The Iran framework is a 60-day memorandum, not a treaty, and a single Hormuz incident would re-arm the oil premium overnight. And core PCE can firm even as headline energy fades. The read is wrong if Micron's reaction reverses higher, if core PCE prints hot regardless of energy, or if the Iran transit halts.
Net, conviction is high that the AI trade has lost both its policy cushion and its momentum, and that the day was a genuine de-risking rather than noise (emerging markets down 6% and gold down 2% are the tell - this was liquidation, not rotation). Conviction is medium that the oil deflation turns Thursday's PCE into a relief rather than a blow. The two threads meet at the same place: Micron's reaction today and core PCE on Thursday are the reads that tell you whether this was the start of an unwind or a single bad session in a still-intact bull market.