The market entered the week with one question hanging over everything:
could the AI trade survive the bond market?
That was the real story beneath every move. NVIDIA earnings mattered. The Fed minutes mattered. The Iran/Hormuz headlines mattered. Quantum grants mattered. Software earnings mattered. But all of those narratives were operating under the same larger pressure point: rates were pressing against the ceiling of the market.
The 30-year Treasury yield pushed toward the highest level since before the Global Financial Crisis, creating a major valuation test for high-multiple growth stocks. At the same time, the market was still trying to digest whether the AI trade had more room to run or whether it had become too crowded, too expensive, and too dependent on one stock: NVIDIA.
By the end of the week, the answer was not simple. NVIDIA delivered a monster earnings report, but the stock barely reacted. That muted response became one of the most important tells of the week. It suggested that the good news was already priced in, and that the market needed a new catalyst or a new area of leadership to keep the rally alive.
Weekly Market Snapshot
Friday changed the tone. Quantum computing grants hit the tape. Iran deal speculation intensified. Oil dropped below the psychological pressure zone that had been hanging over the market. Small caps, regional banks, homebuilders, cybersecurity, select software names, and speculative technology started to look better.
Part 1: What Happened Last Week
The Week’s Narrative Arc
Act 1: Bonds Put a Ceiling on the Market
The early part of the week was dominated by yield pressure. The 30-year Treasury yield pushed toward the highest levels in years, and that created a heavy ceiling over high-multiple growth stocks. When long-duration yields rise, the market becomes less forgiving toward expensive growth stories. That is especially important for AI, semiconductors, software, and speculative technology.
This created a difficult backdrop for the market. The AI trade was still powerful, but it was running into a macro wall. Bonds were saying: prove it.
Act 2: NVIDIA Became the Market’s Main Event
By Wednesday, everything revolved around NVIDIA. The market was not just watching a single earnings report. It was watching the emotional center of the bull market.
NVIDIA had become more than a company. It had become the symbol of the AI trade, the semiconductor trade, the mega-cap leadership trade, and the market’s willingness to pay premium valuations for future growth.
NVIDIA delivered a huge beat, guided strongly, and announced a massive buyback. But the stock barely moved. That muted reaction was not about bad numbers. The numbers were excellent. The issue was positioning, expectations, and exhaustion.
Act 3: Software Became More Complicated
During the week, software gave mixed signals. Intuit sold off sharply after guidance disappointed, reinforcing the idea that AI software monetization is still not being rewarded evenly. The market was willing to pay for hardware infrastructure, chips, and data-center demand, but it was not blindly rewarding every software company that mentioned AI.
Then Workday changed the tone. Workday’s strong report helped lift the enterprise software conversation. Zoom also acted well. Cybersecurity remained strong. Software is not dead, but it is no longer a blanket trade. It is stock-picker territory.
Act 4: Friday Brought the Rotation Catalyst
Friday introduced two major narrative shifts. First, quantum computing became a live market theme after reports of major government grants. IBM became the institutional anchor, while speculative quantum names caught aggressive attention.
Second, reports of progress toward a U.S.-Iran deal created the possibility of oil relief. That mattered because oil had been one of the pressure points feeding inflation and yield concerns. If oil stays contained, rate-sensitive trades can continue to build. If oil spikes again, that rotation can unwind quickly.
Part 2: What the Dashboard Is Saying
The Dashboard Read: Rotation Is the Story
The dashboard confirms the same message: the market is rotating beneath the surface.
SPY appears across several lists because it is being used as the baseline. That is important. SPY is not just another ticker in the dashboard. It is the reference point.
When small caps, Russell-related names, regional banks, retail, homebuilders, cybersecurity, and speculative technology are outperforming SPY, that usually leans risk-on. When those groups are underperforming SPY, it usually leans risk-off.
This week, several risk-on areas are above SPY. The Russell is acting better than the S&P. IWM is showing stronger weekly performance than SPY. Regional banks are participating. Retail and homebuilders are participating. Cybersecurity is leading. Speculative technology is active. Quantum names exploded. Solar and clean energy are starting to show signs of life.
Risk-On Evidence
- Small caps improving
- Regional banks participating
- Cybersecurity leading
- Quantum and speculative tech active
- Homebuilders and retail showing strength
Macro Caution
- Dollar remains firm
- Bond relief not fully confirmed
- Metals are weak
- Bitcoin is weak
- Walmart warns on the consumer
Market Structure: Bullish, but Not Clean
The larger market structure remains constructive, but short-term momentum is uneven.
The Russell futures have the strongest structure among the major equity futures. Price action is strong on the shorter and daily timeframes, and the weekly trend remains constructive. That matters because the Russell is often a cleaner gauge of risk appetite than the S&P 500.
The Nasdaq and Dow remain constructive on the larger timeframe, but both show signs of short-term hesitation. Growth is still participating, but it is not leading with the same force it showed earlier in the AI rally.
The S&P futures are the weakest of the major equity futures in the shorter-term structure. The larger trend is not broken, but the near-term price action has softened.
Risk-On / Risk-Off Conditions
The risk-on evidence is real. Small caps are improving. Regional banks are improving. Retail is acting well. Homebuilders are acting well. Cybersecurity is strong. Speculative names are moving aggressively. Quantum stocks are showing extreme momentum.
Some Bitcoin miners are acting better than Bitcoin itself because the market may be starting to view them as AI compute or power-infrastructure plays rather than pure crypto proxies.
But the risk-off evidence is also present. The dollar is firm. This is an important nuance. The dashboard’s price-action read on the dollar looks positive across key timeframes, but the actual percentage move is tiny. The dollar is not exploding higher. It is mostly flat on the week.
Bonds, Yields, Dollar, and Metals
The bond market remains the ceiling.
TLT was up on the week, which suggests there was some yield relief. That likely helped rate-sensitive groups like real estate, homebuilders, utilities, regional banks, and some growth stocks. But TLT pulled back slightly into Friday, which suggests yields started creeping up again late in the week.
Macro Read
| Bonds / TLT | Short-term yield relief appeared, but it is not fully trusted yet. |
| Dollar | Firm and refusing to break down, but not surging. |
| Metals | Weak action suggests skepticism toward durable rate relief. |
| Risk Assets | Equities are rotating, but the macro backdrop is still not clean. |
The metals confirm the skepticism. Gold, silver, miners, and junior miners are weak. If the market believed yields were rolling over in a sustained way, metals would probably be acting better. Instead, the precious metals complex is not confirming the bond relief trade.
Oil, Iran, and the Rate-Relief Trade
Oil was one of the major pressure points during the week. The Iran/Hormuz situation created an inflation and supply-risk overlay. Oil above the key pressure zone was feeding the bond-market concern.
That is why the Iran deal speculation mattered so much. If oil stays below the major pressure area, then the market has room to continue the rate-relief rotation. If oil spikes again, that relief trade can unwind.
Part 3: Where Money Is Rotating
Sector Rotation: Broadening Beneath the Surface
The sector picture is one of the more constructive parts of the dashboard. Semiconductors are still positive on the larger timeframe, but short-term action is mixed. That makes sense. Semiconductors have been the dominant leadership group for a long time, and after the NVIDIA report, the market may need time to digest whether the group still has enough fuel to lead.
Technology is also still constructive on the larger timeframe, but not universally strong underneath. QQQ and the Nasdaq are participating, but they are not the cleanest leadership areas in the dashboard.
Cybersecurity
One of the cleanest leadership pockets. Strength here supports the idea that software leadership is becoming more selective and theme-driven.
Small Caps / Regional Banks
Important risk-appetite signals. Strength relative to SPY suggests money is willing to move beyond mega-cap safety.
Retail / Homebuilders
Supports the broadening argument, though Walmart’s weakness complicates the consumer read.
Clean Energy / Solar
May be rotating from forgotten laggard status into a new AI-power-adjacent theme.
Clean energy and solar are becoming more interesting. Bloom Energy continues to act well. First Solar is also showing strength. TAN and ICLN are constructive. This suggests clean energy may be rotating from forgotten laggard status into a new AI-power-adjacent theme.
Mag 7: No Longer Carrying the Whole Market
The Mag 7 section shows a major leadership shift. Apple and Tesla are the strongest names in the group. Their price action remains constructive across the important timeframes, and they are holding up better than several mega-cap peers.
Amazon and Meta are mixed. They are not breaking down aggressively, but they are not clean leaders either. Microsoft is weak. Google is weak in the short term. NVIDIA is also weak in the short term, despite the larger structure not being completely broken.
This is a major change because NVIDIA has been one of the most important stocks in the entire market. When NVIDIA leads, the market can ignore a lot of weakness elsewhere. When NVIDIA stalls, the market needs a new engine.
Possible Baton Pass
NVIDIA: The Most Important Stock Still Needs to Prove It
NVIDIA’s earnings report was excellent, but the reaction was muted. That was the key tell.
The stock slightly broke below its daily uptrending channel and closed near an important support zone. This does not confirm a full breakdown, but it does put NVIDIA at an important decision point.
NVIDIA Decision Tree
- Reclaims the lower edge of the prior channel: bullish continuation setup improves.
- Holds nearby support but does not reclaim: watch-and-wait.
- Loses nearby support: deeper support test becomes more likely.
- Loses the larger support zone: bullish structure becomes more vulnerable.
Software and IGV: Winners and Losers, Not a Blanket Rally
Software is now a stock-picker’s market. Intuit’s weakness showed that AI software monetization is still not being rewarded blindly. The market punished guidance weakness. That reinforced the idea that the AI software story must be proven, not just described.
Workday complicated that bearish software read by delivering a strong report. Zoom also acted well. Cybersecurity remained strong. That tells us software is not broken across the board.
Walmart and the Consumer Warning
Walmart’s weakness is an important warning. Walmart is not just another stock. It is a consumer bellwether. When Walmart sells off sharply after earnings, that tells us something about consumer pressure, margins, spending behavior, or expectations.
The dashboard shows Walmart as one of the clear downside names. That matters because it sits in contrast to the strength in speculative technology and other risk-on areas.
Bitcoin, Miners, and the AI Infrastructure Reclassification
Bitcoin itself is weak. Bitcoin futures, IBIT, COIN, and MSTR are not confirming a strong crypto-risk rally. Normally, that would hurt miners.
But some miners are acting better than Bitcoin. That is important. The market may be reclassifying certain miners as AI infrastructure or compute-power plays instead of pure Bitcoin proxies. Miners have power access, data-center infrastructure, and high-performance computing optionality.
Clean Energy, Solar, and the AI Power Trade
Bloom Energy continuing to act well is important. First Solar showing strength adds another layer. TAN and ICLN are also constructive.
This may be an early signal that clean energy and solar are rotating into favor. But the more important point is not “green energy.” The more important point is power.
AI needs electricity. Data centers need electricity. Semiconductor manufacturing needs electricity. Cloud infrastructure needs electricity. The entire AI buildout depends on the physical power layer underneath it.
AI Power Watch Areas
Part 4: What to Watch Next
High-Volume and Speculative Leadership
The high-volume list is loaded with speculation. Quantum names, AI-adjacent names, space-related names, and beaten-down high-beta stocks are moving aggressively. This is where the animal spirits are most obvious.
Quantum is the most explosive theme. The group is acting like the market is searching for the next AI-style speculation wave. This does not mean the fundamentals are fully proven. Speculative markets do not always wait for fundamentals. They chase narrative, momentum, possibility, and liquidity.
Breakout Candidates
The breakout list confirms the main themes. The strongest breakout candidates are names where price action is strong across the shorter, daily, and weekly views. These are not just random bounces. They are showing trend alignment.
Breakout Theme Clusters
| Semis / Hardware | AI infrastructure and non-NVDA semiconductor leadership. |
| Cybersecurity | One of the cleanest software-related leadership pockets. |
| Space / Spec Growth | High-beta momentum tied to future-growth themes. |
| Cyclicals | Confirmation that rotation is broader than mega-cap tech. |
The dashboard provides the map. The individual chart still needs to provide the trade. The best candidates need confirmation through a reclaim of short-term structure, a break of a countertrend line, a higher low, a move through resistance, relative strength versus SPY, or volume confirmation.
Breakdown Candidates
The breakdown list has one very clear theme: China.
China ADRs and China-related names are weak across the board. This is not isolated weakness. It is a cluster. Clustered weakness is more important than single-stock weakness because it suggests broader institutional selling, macro concern, regulatory concern, currency pressure, or sector-specific stress.
Weekly Watchlist
| Area | What to Watch |
|---|---|
| SPY | Does short-term fatigue resolve higher or lower? |
| IWM / Russell | Confirms or rejects risk-on broadening. |
| NVDA | Reclaim structure or test deeper support. |
| TLT / Yields | Confirms or rejects yield relief. |
| CIBR | Cybersecurity leadership continuation. |
| TAN / ICLN | AI power rotation confirmation. |
| China ADRs | Breakdown continuation or stabilization. |
| WMT / Consumer | Consumer weakness remains isolated or spreads. |
Final Weekly Read
The market remains constructive, but the leadership map is changing.
This is no longer a simple market where NVIDIA leads, QQQ follows, and SPY grinds higher. That trade may still matter, but it is no longer the whole story. The market is rotating.
Small caps are improving. Regional banks are participating. Retail and homebuilders are acting better. Cybersecurity is leading. Select software earnings winners are being rewarded. Quantum is becoming a live speculation theme. AI infrastructure is expanding beyond chips. Clean energy and solar may be entering the power-demand narrative. Bitcoin miners may be getting reclassified as AI compute plays.
Bull Case
- Small caps keep outperforming SPY
- Cybersecurity and software winners keep leading
- Oil stays contained
- TLT stabilizes and yields calm down
- AI power and infrastructure themes continue
Bear Risk
- Yields reaccelerate
- NVDA loses support
- Dollar strength pressures risk assets
- Consumer weakness spreads beyond Walmart
- China breakdowns keep widening
Bottom Line
The market is broadening, but it still does not fully trust the macro.
The opportunity is in relative strength. The risk is in assuming the whole market is healthy just because speculative pockets are moving.
This is not a passive “buy the index and ignore everything else” moment. It is a rotation tape. Leadership selection matters more. Relative strength matters more. Macro confirmation matters more. And SPY should continue to be used as the baseline.

⏰ Get the Pre-Market Report in Your Inbox Every Morning Before the Bell
Subscribe now to get your first 30 days free. After that, your daily Pre-Market Report is only $5/month.
Subscribe Free →Take the Next Step with Stock Chartistry
Stock Chartistry collaborates with the Bi-Lingual Stock Market Channel community.
Explore their Patreon or join their Discord here: patreon.com/bsmc_eng