US futures are trading at new all-time highs following Tuesday’s record-setting rally (when the S&P hit a newrecord high on negative breadthas is now the norm) , bolstered by a growing chorus of Wall Street bulls: Goldman lifts its S&P 500 target, while Barclays strategists say investors still have capacity to chase the rally, while the memory bubble just keeps raging as the market value of Korea's SK Hynix sailed above the trillion-dollar mark just one day after fellow chip maker Micron did the same. As of 8:00am, S&P 500 futures are up 0.3% while Nasdaq 100 contracts are rising 0.4%. And speaking of Micron, after soaring more than 20% on Tuesday, MU shares shares are up another up another 5% in premarket because why not, and point to a continuation of the bubble in memory-chip stocks; Semis are also bid (SOXX +2%); cyclicals are set for another positive session led by Discretionary, Industrials, and Materials. In Defensives, both HC and Staples are positive but underperforming SPX. European and Asian stocks also climb as broader risk sentiment is underpinned by a pullback in oil prices on the now daily optimism that the US and Iran will reach a peace deal. US yields are down 1-2bps even with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot index up to session highs. Brent crude futures for July are down 3% to around $96.70 a barrel. Ags are weaker, with Metals being pulled lower, too while precious metals tumble. Today's economic data slate includes weekly ADP employment change (8:15am), May Richmond Fed manufacturing index (10am) and May Dallas Fed services activity (10:30am). Fed speaker slate includes Cook (3:55pm), Jefferson (8pm) and Goolsbee (10:25pm).

In premarket trading, Mag 7 stocks are mixed early Wednesday (Alphabet -0.5%, Nvidia +0.4%, Apple +0.1%, Tesla +1.6%, Amazon +0.02%, Microsoft -0.5%, Meta -0.5%)

In other corporate news, Samsung Electronics union members voted in favor of a compensation deal, staving off a strike that threatened to disrupt global chip supply. They will get over $300,000 as part of the deal. And China is said to have been slow-walking approval of Airbus plane deliveries to signal impatience with how long European regulators are taking to certify Chinese-made aircraft. In AI news, ByteDance is planning to sharply increase its capital spending this year and next in a bid to lead the Chinese AI market and challenge the top US players abroad. Software companies and their private equity investors will face mounting strains as debt redemptions swell in coming years, according to Canadian investment manager CI GAM.

“Given the capex plans of the AI hyperscalers, there’s no reason to think that the rally is about to end,” said Fares Hendi, a portfolio manager at Societe de Gestion Prevoir in Paris. “If there’s a breakthrough between the US and Iran, the trend could accelerate, with investors buying back their shorts.”

With no overnight news from the Middle East, optimism that the US and Iran are nearing a deal to fully reopen the Strait of Hormuz pushed Brent down 2.6% to around $97 a barrel as traders grew less concerned about an energy-driven spike in inflation. Sentiment was further boosted by the batshit insane meltup in Korea (just two stocks technically) which has made the Nasdaq bubble of 1999 look like amateur hour. Strategists at Goldman joined peers at Morgan Stanley and Deutsche Bank in seeing a 17% return for the S&P 500 Index this year. Earnings growth powered by the AI boom will drive further gains in stocks, the Goldman team led by Ben Snider said, as they increased their year-end target for the US benchmark to 8,000 points, ditching a previous forecast of 7,600.

“We are in the midst of something very structural and huge — the AI CapEx theme — and it’d be very dangerous to stand against it,” said Lilian Chovin, head of asset allocation at Coutts. In other words, just put a blindfold on and buy.

Meanwhile, the momentum behind the AI trade continued, with investors betting that chipmakers will capture an outsized share of global capital spending even as millions of furious workers are fired and eager to burn down every data center they see. Adding to the insanity, BBVA strategists said it could be a good time to sell US equity volatility, noting short vol portfolios have the strongest overall forward signal compared to other risk premia strategies. Since 1990, VIX has tended to drop in June and July, before rising again in August and September, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Let's just ignore that whole other "sell in May" calendar thingy. Meanwhile, the excess capital chasing AI assets is creating a liquidity overhang and driving up risk for investors, notes GGL Capital’s founder Gigi Luk.

Shares in semiconductor and chip equipment companies are rising again as the surge in the sector intensifies, sending the market capitalizations of SK Hynix and Micron Technology above $1 trillion

With bullish sentiment running high, the European Central Bank said that financial markets are in danger of a sudden and significant correction, warning that investors are downplaying a range of threats from the Iran war to fiscal pressures.

The “question is how soon, or whether we will go back to a pre-conflict situation with regard to Hormuz, and that’s where we are cautious,” said Chovin. “The disruption to commodities will remain fairly high even if a deal is made.”

Source: ZeroHedge News