U.S. stock futures recouped part of earlier losses on Monday as reports of forward movement in talks between Iran and U.S. representatives reduced fears of a rapid escalation in the Middle East. At the same time, developments in the artificial intelligence sector - including a shift in tone from the White House toward the AI company Anthropic and ongoing export-control frictions - kept investor focus on regulatory risk for the industry.
Markets were also reacting to structural shifts within semiconductors, where chipmakers supplying AI infrastructure are capturing outsized investor attention. In South Korea, SK Hynix surpassed Samsung Electronics in market value as demand for high-bandwidth memory rose.
Futures stabilize after early drops
By 0333 ET (0733 GMT), S&P 500 and Dow Jones futures were down 0.06% each, while Nasdaq 100 futures were up 0.16%. Earlier in the session, futures had declined more steeply when President Trump warned of potential additional strikes against Iran even as diplomacy continued, stoking concerns that tensions might flare and push oil prices higher.
Sentiment improved after officials from Iran and international mediators adopted a more upbeat public posture following talks held in Switzerland. For market participants, the central question is whether diplomacy will prevent a fresh upward shock to energy prices and the geopolitical uncertainty that can weigh on risk assets and inflation expectations. Indications of a durable diplomatic path would likely be supportive of risk appetite and ease energy-driven inflation worries.
Iran signals "major progress" in negotiations
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Aragchi said the sessions produced "major progress" toward resolving the conflict, according to a social media statement. Aragchi indicated the discussions moved forward on items including waivers for Iranian oil and petrochemical exports, the removal of a U.S. naval blockade and the initiation of a reconstruction and development program.
Pakistan and Qatar, which participated as mediators, characterized the opening round of high-level talks in Switzerland as encouraging and said further discussions were planned. While many specifics remain unresolved, the public comments suggest both sides are continuing diplomatic engagement despite recent military tensions.
Artificial intelligence remains under scrutiny after Anthropic dispute
The AI sector was under close watch after President Trump told Axios that he no longer views Anthropic as a national security threat, reversing a firmer posture he had taken a week earlier. Trump said Anthropic had responded "very quickly" and "responsibly" to the administration's concerns, a shift that could temper some investor anxiety over immediate regulatory action.
The controversy followed Commerce Department restrictions on Anthropic's flagship Mythos and Fable models, which led the company to withdraw those products from the market. A leaked government letter suggested that foreign nationals would need individually approved licenses to access the models, potentially including some non-U.S. employees.
The episode laid bare the tension between national security imperatives and policies intended to preserve U.S. leadership in AI. Investors noted that aggressive government intervention presents a material risk to AI firms and the suppliers that serve them. Although the president's softer remarks may reduce short-term concern, he did not rule out the possibility of employing emergency powers against the company in the future.
SK Hynix overtakes Samsung amid AI-driven chip demand
In South Korea, SK Hynix's stock climbed 3.7%, lifting its market value to about 2,082 trillion won and making it the country's most valuable listed company. Samsung Electronics shares fell 1.4%, leaving its market capitalization slightly below SK Hynix's level.
The shift highlights how demand tied to artificial intelligence is reshaping the semiconductor landscape. SK Hynix has benefited from leadership in high-bandwidth memory, or HBM, chips that are integral to advanced AI systems. The company is an important supplier to Nvidia and has said it provided samples of next-generation HBM4 memory products to key customers.
For investors, the change underscores that while companies like Nvidia remain the public face of the AI investment theme, component suppliers - especially those providing critical memory and infrastructure parts - are capturing significant value as AI infrastructure spending rises.
Charles Schwab plans binary options offering
The Wall Street Journal reported that Charles Schwab is preparing a new options contract that would let investors place binary, yes-or-no wagers on the direction of the S&P 500. The brokerage is said to be working with Cboe Global Markets on the rollout, with the products expected to arrive in coming months.
Binary options pay a fixed amount if a stated outcome occurs and nothing if it does not. Proponents argue they provide a simple mechanism to express a market view, while critics warn the instruments can encourage speculative behavior because outcomes are effectively all-or-nothing. The initiative comes as brokerages continue to introduce new products aimed at retail clients to boost engagement.
Investor takeaways
- Diplomatic signals from Iran and mediators briefly eased volatility linked to geopolitical risk, but many details are still unresolved.
- Regulatory risk remains a meaningful factor for the AI sector after the Anthropic export-controls episode and the administration's statements underscored the potential for future intervention.
- The semiconductor industry is being reweighted by AI demand, bringing suppliers of specialized memory chips into sharper investor focus.
Overall, markets are balancing near-term geopolitical headlines with structural shifts tied to AI and semiconductors, while also monitoring product innovations in retail brokerage that could influence trading behavior.