Overnight: the U.S.-Iran framework stalled, with renewed military activity reported around the Strait of Hormuz and Tehran's ceasefire posture wobbling. The clean "deal is coming" narrative that drove yesterday's record highs flipped overnight. Asia sold off — Nikkei -1.0%, Hang Seng -1.2%, KOSPI off its record, ASX -1.5% after a fresh RBA hike, CSI 300 -0.5%. European futures opened ~0.6% softer with Stoxx 600 and Euro Stoxx 50 both giving back yesterday's gains.
Oil reversed sharply on the Hormuz risk: Brent back through $100 to ~$101.5 (+1.4%, intraday high +3%), WTI ~$95.9 (+1.2%). The dollar firmed (DXY ~98.2) into the U.S. payrolls print due this morning, while the 10-year yield eased a touch to ~4.37% as duration caught a bid. U.S. futures are still modestly green (S&P +0.2%, Nasdaq +0.6%) — meaning U.S. equities, for now, are choosing to fade the Asia/Europe move rather than join it.
The asymmetry we flagged yesterday is playing out the wrong way: the "yes" was already priced, and even a soft "maybe" is enough to take oil higher and equities lower. Watch the jobs print into the open — a hot number on top of an oil shock is the bear case for risk; a soft number gives the Fed cover and could refloat the rally.
DASH printed Tuesday after-hours and the read got fully digested by yesterday's tape. Total Orders 933M, +27% YoY. Marketplace GOV $31.6B, +37% YoY. Revenue $4.0B, +33%. Adjusted EBITDA $754M, +28%. GAAP net income $184M, -5% on heavier reinvestment. Strong YoY growth in new consumers and order rates in U.S. restaurants; SevenRooms partner signs accelerating; Reservations launched in Chicago. Pair this with the McDonald's U.S. comp miss from yesterday: the consumer is squeezed, but they're not stopping spend — they're routing it through the cheapest, most convenient channel. DoorDash is taking wallet share from the dine-in trade. Read-through is pro third-party delivery, mixed-to-negative for full-service restaurants and grocery anchors that don't have a strong delivery moat.
Wednesday's NAAIM Exposure Index came in at 93.79, fractionally lower than 94.15 the prior week but still well into "fully invested" territory. Fear & Greed ticked from 67 to 68 — extreme greed range. The setup into this morning: active managers have not lightened up materially, sentiment is stretched, and the geopolitical and macro catalysts (Iran flare-up, payrolls) are now hitting an unhedged book. That's the recipe for a quick mechanical drawdown if the jobs print or the Hormuz tape gets worse. For a single-strategy fundamental shop, this is the part of the cycle where dispersion opens up and gross/net discipline pays.
Australia's central bank hiked rates overnight, knocking the ASX 200 down 1.5% and erasing the week's gains. RBA hiking in May 2026 — into a mixed global growth picture and a renewed oil shock — is one of the cleaner DM data points for the stagflation-tilt trade that's been quietly rebuilding in macro books since late April. AUD response and Australian rates curve are worth watching today as a forward read on whether other DM central banks (BoE, ECB, BoC) get pushed back into "higher for longer" if Brent stays above $100.
Another wave of law-firm and AIMA member alerts hit yesterday/this morning on the SEC + CFTC joint Form PF re-proposal: filing threshold moves from $150M to $1B AUM (cuts ~50% of filers, retains ~94% of GAV); large hedge fund adviser threshold moves from $1.5B to $10B (cuts ~65% of large filers, retains ~80%+ of HF GAV); quarterly PE event reporting goes; look-through replaced with a reasonable-estimate standard; current-report clock for large HFs hardens to 72 hours. Comment period runs through June 23. For mid-sized advisers between $1.5B and $10B, this is meaningful annual cost takeout — the comment-letter window is the leverage point.
The SEC's final order on Rule 205-3 stays in focus this week as advisers update sub-docs. AUM threshold for performance-fee eligibility rises to $1.4M (from $1.1M); net worth to $2.7M (from $2.2M, ex-primary residence). Effective June 29. Practical: any borderline allocators in Vardon's pipeline should subscribe before June 29 to grandfather under the lower threshold.
Yesterday Larry Fink was on tape calling the AI capex cycle "real, not a bubble." Overnight, with the Iran flare-up dragging Asian chip names lower (SoftBank well off the +18% spike, Korean and Taiwanese semis weak), that thesis gets its first real-time stress test. The narrative bull case (multi-year hyperscale capex, accelerating enterprise adoption) is intact; the price action is reminding the market that AI-leveraged Asia tech is high beta. Watch the U.S. mega-cap AI names today — if they hold while Asia chips bleed, Fink's framing wins another round; if they crack alongside Hormuz risk, the tape is telling you positioning matters more than narrative right now.
What's actually new on the desk.
Perplexity's "Comet for Professional Finance" rolled out earlier this week (35 prebuilt finance workflows, 40+ tool integrations) and FactSet's countermove at its FOCUS conference — industry-first MCP server for AI-ready data access, expanded "FactSet AI for Banking" with Finster AI, beta AI doc search for private capital — has framed the rest of the week's discussion. Read alongside the FactSet share weakness: the unbundling of the institutional finance terminal is happening in real time, and incumbents face a "buy, build, or bleed" decision. For Vardon, the practical question is which of these tools materially compresses the analyst workflow this quarter.