
π Good morning! The stock market put in another surge on Friday to close out a week of record highs.
The big catalyst? Iran said the Strait of Hormuz is open for business as talks seemed to bear fruit, which sent oil down around 9%, back into the $80s for domestic oil and around $90 for Brent crude.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) broke the 7,100 mark for the first time after rising 1.2%, the Dow (^DJI) rose 1.8%, and the Nasdaq (^IXIC) rose 1.5% β also hitting a new record of 24,468.
We’re on the lookout for more peace talks this weekend.
π€ Block CEO Jack Dorsey explains cutting 40% of staff amid AI shift. Dorsey has no problem saying the why behind thte layoffs.
π’οΈ Fed’s Waller strikes a cautious tone on rate cuts amid oil shock. The word “transitory” has come back.
π³ Oil is trading below $90 per barrel in the futures market. In Sri Lanka, buyers are paying $286.
π‘ Older millennials are starting to act like boomers in the housing market.
π Lilly CEO sees weight-loss drugs reaching only half of potential users. Clearly, there’s a big total addressable market here.
π Meta targets May 20 for first wave of layoffs. Additional cuts later in 2026 are planned.
π The rally in tech stocks is widening beyond semiconductors and into software.
βοΈ Ex-CEO, ex-CFO of bankrupt AI company charged with fraud. Former executives from iLearningEngines are in some trouble.
π Drone maker Aevex stock climbs 23% after $320 million US IPO.
π Allbirds stock notches 350% gain this week as shoemaker pivots to AI.
π The stock market’s big breakout still needs an under-the-hood check.
π° Struggling to save for retirement? Something is better than nothing.
See what else is trending on Yahoo Finance.
Today’s Takeaway is a deep dive by Myles Udland, our Head of News.
Netflix (NFLX) stock got hammered on Friday, falling 10%, as tends to happen when companies miss guidance for the current quarter.
But the strategic path that Netflix has taken to this moment β and the outline of the company’s path ahead β reveals that the entertainment leader has fully entered a new era.
The obvious marker of the company’s new era is who it will not be bringing along β co-founder Reed Hastings. Hastings announced Thursday he won’t be standing for reelection to the company’s board.
How Netflix characterizes its current initiatives, opportunities, and plans of attack are also significant markers of a company that has moved from an insurgency to an incumbency phase of corporate life. And it’s doing so by using some of the profitable tools once wielded by the incumbents it has since overtaken.



