Dow jumps 350 points as SpaceX soars and Iran deal hopes grow

Dow jumps 350 points as SpaceX soars and Iran deal hopes grow
Ananthu C U
13 Jun 2026, 08:26 AM

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SPCX (SpaceX)

Buy SPCX. The IPO popped ~19% and the float is tiny (only ~3–4% expected to trade), so demand can stay supply-constrained and keep pushing the stock higher even after the initial excitement. SpaceX’s $2T+ valuation and momentum are likely to attract more index/ETF and momentum buyers as liquidity remains thin.

Key Risk: A sudden lockup/float expansion or heavy secondary selling that breaks the supply-demand squeeze.

WTI (oil)

Sell WTI via short exposure (e.g., buy USO puts or short WTI futures). A credible US–Iran deal that lifts oil sanctions and reopens the Strait of Hormuz is a direct path to lower oil prices, which also eases inflation fears and supports risk assets. The article already shows WTI down ~3% on the news—there’s room for further repricing if negotiations move from “hopes” to “text signed.”

Key Risk: Deal talks fail or the Strait of Hormuz stays constrained, sending oil back up fast.

  • Dow jumps 354 points as US-Iran peace hopes boost markets.
  • SpaceX surges 19% in Nasdaq debut, topping a $2 trillion valuation.
  • Oil falls as investors bet easing tensions may curb inflation.

US stocks closed higher on Friday as investors welcomed signs of progress toward a potential peace agreement between the United States and Iran, while SpaceX's blockbuster market debut added to positive sentiment across Wall Street.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 353.51 points, or 0.7%, to close at 51,202.26.

The S&P 500 gained 0.5% to finish at 7,431.46, while the Nasdaq Composite added 0.31% to end at 25,888.84.

Investor optimism was supported by reports suggesting that negotiations between Washington and Tehran were moving closer to a resolution.

A senior US administration official said a draft proposal had been agreed upon by both sides, while Iranian state media reported that a draft memorandum of understanding included a US commitment to lift oil sanctions and an Iranian commitment to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.

Bloomberg reported that a peace deal could be signed in Switzerland as soon as Sunday.

SpaceX debut captures Wall Street's attention

Much of Friday's market focus centered on Elon Musk's SpaceX, which made its long-awaited debut on the Nasdaq under the ticker symbol SPCX.

The stock opened at $150 per share, above its initial public offering price of $135.

Shares surged more than 20% shortly after trading began and ultimately closed up 19% at $160.95.

The strong debut valued SpaceX at more than $2 trillion and cemented its position among the largest publicly traded companies in the United States.

Analysts noted that only about 3% to 4% of SpaceX shares are expected to be available for trading, contributing to intense investor demand.

Iran peace hopes support broader market sentiment

Market sentiment also improved as investors assessed developments surrounding a possible end to the conflict between the United States and Iran.

"The reported progress in peace talks helped to lift sentiment," said Jake Dollarhide, chief executive officer of Longbow Asset Management.

"There's still hope for a peace deal. Trump called off the attacks ... Third parties are confirming a peace deal is happening."

Dollarhide added that easing geopolitical tensions could reduce concerns about inflation and interest rates by placing downward pressure on oil prices.

Oil prices remained lower on Friday, with West Texas Intermediate crude futures trading roughly 3% lower at around $84 per barrel.

Later in the session, Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif said that a “final, agreed upon text” of a deal had been reached, helping major indexes recover from earlier weakness.

Investors look ahead to Fed meeting

Investors are now turning their attention toward next week's Federal Reserve policy meeting, which will be the first chaired by Kevin Warsh.

While technology stocks delivered mixed performances, several AI-related names remained in focus.

Advanced Micro Devices gained 4%, while Alphabet added 1%. Nvidia was little changed, while Broadcom, Amazon, Microsoft and Palantir Technologies finished lower.

Despite concerns earlier in the week about technology-sector weakness and fund outflows, Friday's gains reflected renewed investor confidence driven by both geopolitical developments and one of the largest public market debuts in history.