“There is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. And if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and will be lost.” – Martha Graham
Chart of the Day

Good morning!
It’s no secret that 2024 was quite a challenging year for Boeing. The aerospace giant nevertheless managed to secure major orders in the second half of the year, and doubtless it was hoping to build on this momentum in 2025. President Trump’s prominent tariff proposal seemed to dampen those hopes, with the EU and China quickly identifying Boeing as a visible and symbolic American company they could target for retaliation. Yet it could be argued that Trump’s return to the White House has benefited Boeing.
It begins with Trump’s March 21 decision to award Boeing a contract to make the next generation of fighter jets, to be dubbed the F-47. “We can’t tell you the price,” Trump told reporters when announcing the contract, but experts estimate the contract to be worth $20 billion.
Trump has not always been a fan of Boeing, of course. He was vocally annoyed that the new Air Force One, which was ordered during his first term, has been run up against multiple delays, setbacks, and massive budget overruns. However, last week, Boeing proposed a 2027 delivery date (in time for him to use before leaving office), subject to the Air Force agreeing to relax capabilities requirements.
This might have mollified Trump enough to stump for Boeing abroad. While not explicitly tied to the U.S.- UK trade deal, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick hailed a $12.7 billion order for 30 Boeing 787s by British Airways’ parent company IAG last week.
That turned out to be just an appetizer. Bloomberg News reported that ahead of his visit to the Middle East this week, “the White House has made clear it would like similar commitments from Qatar [as made] during Trump’s first visit to the gulf state as president,” and in apparent response, Qatar Airways announced an order for 100 (or more) Boeing widebody jets. (It has also been reported that Qatar might give Trump a used 747 to use as an interim Air Force One until Boeing delivers the latest presidential airliner, though there are legal and ethical concerns to resolve first.) In related news, Saudi startup airline Riyadh Air was reported to be considering a Boeing order as well.
Even Trump’s tariff campaign could ultimately have net benefits for Boeing in the long term, as a trade war with China might disrupt the rise of China’s state-run COMAC (Commercial Aircraft Corporation of China), a competitor with ambitions of challenging the global Boeing-Airbus duopoly. COMAC already has a rival to Boeing’s 737 (the C919 single-aisle, narrow-body airliner) and is working to design a wide-body transoceanic aircraft to compete with Boeing’s flagship 777.
But as it turns out, the C919, despite being entirely “made in China,” includes components made by U.S. companies like Honeywell, GE, Arconic, and CFM International (a joint venture between GE and France’s Safran). With no Chinese alternatives readily available, that means the U.S. could “[halt] Comac in its tracks anytime it wants,” Richard Aboulafia, managing director of AeroDynamic Advisory, told the Financial Times. If somehow the U.S.-China trade dispute is not quickly resolved (though the news out of Switzerland over the weekend suggests it very well might be), halting sales of C919 components “may be the next stage,” according to Sash Tusa, a UK-based aerospace and defense analyst.
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What other companies (or industries) have already realized benefits from Trump being back in the Oval Office? Click here to send us your response.
📧✍️Here’s what a reader commented📧✍️
Question: Should (or can) creative products like music and movies be encouraged through trade policy?
Answer: Art should never be influenced by trade policy. Congress knew this which is why there is a specific cutout in the tariff abilities of a president which prevents Trump from placing tariffs on movies/tv shows etc. Not to mention legal challenges over First Amendment violations such proposals would attract, which is probably why the White House walked it back already. The correct way to encourage more film/tv production in the United States is a Federal Tax Subsidy which is greater than the subsidies they are currently getting to shoot in places like Romania. Make it cheaper to shoot in America and they will, otherwise they will keep shooting where they can get more production value out of their dollar.
Catch up with FS Insight
There were several positive developments over the weekend from the White House (China-USA deal and a coming Executive Order cutting drug prices 30% to 80%). These add to a series of incremental macro positives over the past few weeks, which have supported the improving positive risk/reward in stocks.
Technical
At present, the pattern in SPX remains constructive and should allow for a push up to 5750-5800.
Crypto
While there is no need to “panic chase,” ETH likely begins trading better from here, and in our view, we should start considering ETH beta names.
News We’re Following
Breaking News
- U.S., China agree to large tariff cuts, Dow futures rally WSJ
Markets and economy
- Berkshire Hathaway now owns 5% of entire Treasury-bill market as Buffett patiently waits for his elephant CNBC
- Trump plan would tie some drug prices to what peer nations pay NYT
- World’s largest EV battery maker CATL to raise at least $4 billion FT
Business
- Zepbound beats Wegovy for weight loss in first head-to-head trial of blockbuster drugs AP
- OpenAI negotiates with Microsoft to unlock new funding and future IPO FT
- Google’s search dominance might not be in as much danger as Apple would have you believe YF
Politics
- Flights could be disrupted across U.S., Transportation Secretary warns NYT
- Ras Baraka arrest: Trump administration eyes charging three more NJ Democrats in ICE fracas CNBC
Overseas
- Hormone-treated beef will not enter UK after US deal, says UK government BBC
- Zelensky challenges Putin’s offer to meet after Russia ignores ceasefire demand CNN
Of Interest
- Taliban suspends chess over gambling concerns BBC
- Online bettors spent over $40 million gambling on identity of next pope CNBC
Overnight |
S&P Futures +159
point(s) (+2.8%
) Overnight range: +56 to +176 point(s) |
APAC |
Nikkei +0.38%
Topix +0.31% China SHCOMP +0.82% Hang Seng +2.98% Korea +1.17% Singapore flat Australia +0.03% India +3.76% Taiwan +1.03% |
Europe |
Stoxx 50 +2.0%
Stoxx 600 +1.12% FTSE 100 +0.56% DAX +1.22% CAC 40 +1.7% Italy +1.81% IBEX +0.74% |
FX |
Dollar Index (DXY) +1.15%
to 101.49 EUR/USD -1.09% to 1.1127 GBP/USD -0.79% to 1.3201 USD/JPY +1.78% to 147.96 USD/CNY -0.34% to 7.2133 USD/CNH -0.43% to 7.2095 USD/CHF +1.52% to 0.8439 USD/CAD +0.22% to 1.3965 AUD/USD -0.05% to 0.6411 |
Crypto |
BTC +0.1%
to 104405.32 ETH +1.61% to 2550.91 XRP +2.06% to 2.4199 Cardano +2.43% to 0.8259 Solana +1.91% to 175.69 Avalanche +3.23% to 25.57 Dogecoin +7.59% to 0.2482 Chainlink +2.24% to 17.33 |
Commodities and Others |
VIX -8.63%
to 20.01 WTI Crude +3.29% to 63.03 Brent Crude +3.11% to 65.9 Nat Gas +0.42% to 3.81 RBOB Gas +2.04% to 2.151 Heating Oil +2.44% to 2.117 Gold -3.06% to 3223.22 Silver -1.26% to 32.31 Copper -0.09% to 4.607 |
US Treasuries |
1M -0.6bps
to 4.2697% 3M +0.2bps to 4.3222% 6M +1.8bps to 4.2504% 12M +4.3bps to 4.0986% 2Y +9.6bps to 3.9873% 5Y +8.8bps to 4.0888% 7Y +7.9bps to 4.2588% 10Y +5.9bps to 4.4374% 20Y +3.3bps to 4.8936% 30Y +2.2bps to 4.8564% |
UST Term Structure |
2Y-3
M Spread widened 6.6bps to -37.1
bps 10Y-2 Y Spread narrowed 3.9bps to 44.6 bps 30Y-10 Y Spread narrowed 3.6bps to 41.6 bps |
Yesterday's Recap |
SPX -0.07%
SPX Eq Wt -0.02% NASDAQ 100 -0.01% NASDAQ Comp +0.0% Russell Midcap -0.01% R2k -0.16% R1k Value -0.05% R1k Growth -0.08% R2k Value +0.06% R2k Growth -0.38% FANG+ -0.54% Semis +0.65% Software -0.72% Biotech -2.11% Regional Banks -0.47% SPX GICS1 Sorted: Energy +1.05% REITs +0.65% Cons Disc +0.63% Materials +0.26% Utes +0.17% Indu +0.11% Fin +0.03% Tech -0.0% SPX -0.07% Cons Staples -0.61% Comm Srvcs -0.62% Healthcare -1.1% |
USD HY OaS |
All Sectors -1.7bp
to 395bp All Sectors ex-Energy -0.9bp to 356bp Cons Disc -1.2bp to 396bp Indu +0.5bp to 294bp Tech -2.0bp to 362bp Comm Srvcs -1.6bp to 555bp Materials -1.3bp to 377bp Energy -7.3bp to 454bp Fin Snr -0.2bp to 328bp Fin Sub -2.2bp to 311bp Cons Staples +1.2bp to 278bp Healthcare +0.7bp to 393bp Utes -3.4bp to 266bp * |
Date | Time | Description | Estimate | Last |
---|---|---|---|---|
5/13 | 6AM | Apr Small Biz Optimisum | 95.0 | 97.4 |
5/13 | 8:30AM | Apr CPI m/m | 0.3 | -0.1 |
5/13 | 8:30AM | Apr Core CPI m/m | 0.3 | 0.1 |
5/13 | 8:30AM | Apr CPI y/y | 2.4 | 2.4 |
5/13 | 8:30AM | Apr Core CPI y/y | 2.8 | 2.8 |
5/15 | 8:30AM | Apr PPI m/m | 0.2 | -0.4 |
5/15 | 8:30AM | Apr Core PPI m/m | 0.3 | -0.1 |
5/15 | 8:30AM | Apr Retail Sales m/m | 0.1 | 1.5 |
5/15 | 10AM | May Homebuilder Sentiment | 40.0 | 40.0 |
5/16 | 8:30AM | Apr Import Price m/m | -0.3 | -0.1 |
5/16 | 10AM | May P UMich 1yr Inf Exp | n/a | 6.5 |
5/16 | 10AM | May P UMich Sentiment | 53.3 | 52.2 |
5/16 | 4PM | Mar Net TIC Flows | n/a | 284.732 |