STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Eric Criscuolo- Market Strategist
Published on 7/1/26 (a/o 2:00 pm)
DOW 52,355 (+36), S&P 500 7,499 (-1), Russell 2000 3,028 (+3), NYSE FANG+ 17,213 (+298), ICE Brent Crude $72.00/barrel (-$1.03), Gold $4,077/oz (+$39), Bitcoin ~60.1k (+1595)
  • Happy July and Bobby Bonilla Day
  • Modest start to 2H
  • A new entrant in the cloud business
  • Check out some of the recent ICE Data/Content:
  • Inside the ICE House
  • Episode 543: America250 Chair Rosie Rios on Unity, Storytelling, and America's 250 Years
  • ETF Central: Milliman Principal & Managing Director Adam Schenck
  • NYSE Research Insights: Behind the Record Volumes: A Hidden Opportunity
  • ICE Mortgage Monitor: June 2026 - Home Equity Withdrawals Reach Highest First-Quarter Level Since 2021
  • Market Storylines
MAC Desk Commentary:
June and Q2 ended on a positive note yesterday. Thoughts of fireworks set the market on a risk-on path. Defensive/yield-oriented sectors, outperformers recently, pulled back. It was fitting that the semis, which have outperformed across pretty much every time frame this year, led to the upside. Thematic favorites were also higher as robotics, space and rare earths saw gains. Crypto, however, continued to be under pressure with Bitcoin and Ethereum holding just above the YTD lows.

With the calendar flipping to July we get to celebrate yet another Bobby Bonilla Day. For those unaware, the retired Met gets $1.2m every July 1 until 2035 due to deferring payments in his contract…from the 1990s. Apparently to celebrate this, 2 people climbed to the top of the Empire State Building’s antenna and unfurled a peaceful flag and got engaged, 1,454 feet above the street’s of NYC.   

S&P futures were modestly lower overnight and the index opened down about 0.3%. A little before the Opening Bell, Meta was reported to be forming a new cloud business to sell its surplus compute capacity. CEO Zuckerberg had hinted at this possibility during the Meta AGM a few weeks ago. Recall SpaceX/xAI has also taken that path recently.  Meta company has been one of the most aggressive companies in the AI buildout, and investors have been wondering when the hyperscalers blink at ever increasing capex spend. This isn’t exactly that moment, but investors are liking the announcement, pushing META up 10%. Semis (NYSE Semi Index -5%), neoclouds (CoreWeave, Nebius down >10%) and memory stocks (DRAM ETF down 10%) are getting hit on the news. Interestingly the other hyperscalers- GOOG, AMZN, MSFT- are higher except for ORCL. On the flip side of that trade, software is seeing strong gains, with the IGV ETF up 4%. ServiceNow and Salesforce caught broker upgrades this morning too. Other news likely impacting the sector includes Microsoft expected to announce another round of layoffs next week, and the Commerce Department reportedly will lift export controls on Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models. Overall, the S&P is flat while the equal-weight is up about 0.5%. Sectors are split between gainers and losers. Small caps are modestly higher.
Comm Services is the best-performing sector today on the back of Meta’s 10% jump. Financials are also strong today. FactSet (+8%) beat estimates and reaffirmed guidance, helping the financial services group. Coinbase- a significant underperformer the past year- is up over 10%. Amazon’s 3% gain is helping Consumer Discretionary outperform, as is strength in travel/leisure and retail. That includes Nike 2% gain following earnings. The company’s commentary was not particularly robust however, noting that “our consumer is under pressure around the world, and we can particularly see it having a larger impact on Sportswear…”  Consumer Staples is lower but General Mills is up ~8% following earnings. That’s helped consumer packaged goods but big box retailers are lower, especially Walmart, down 4% on a negative sellside report. The hardware weakness in tech is offsetting the software gains, placing the sector at the bottom of the pile today. Utilities are also lagging, with the IPP’s under the most pressure. 
Labor data this morning was solid in front of tomorrow’s monthly payroll report. The ADP Employment Report came in slightly below estimates and last month, but still up a solid 98K. Services accounted for pretty much all the job creation with about half of that coming from education and health services. There were gains across small (+53K), mid (+29K) and large companies (+25K). Wages for job stayers were unchanged from last month at 4.4% while job changers ticked up slightly to 6.6%. Challenger job cuts fell to 45.8K from 97K last month and were the lowest since December 2025 with layoffs concentrated in technology. ISM Manufacturing disappointed however, coming in at 53.0 vs the 54.4 estimate and prior print. New Orders fell moderating from last month but remained well in expansion (56.0). Prices saw a notable decline, falling from 82.1 to 73.0.  
Yields in Europe were higher after reports that the ECB was considering doubling reserve requirements, but came in during the “Policy Panel” at the ECB’s Sintra Conference, which featured Fed Chair Warsh, BoE’s Bailey, ECB’s Lagarde and BoC’s Macklem. US yields which were up slightly have retreated across the curve to around flat. The US Dollar Index has pulled back from its highs ~101.5. currently up modestly at 101.2. During the Sintra panel, Warsh again made a strong commitment to regain the 2% inflation level and price stability, and the entire panel seemed to be in agreement about moving away from forward guidance.

  • US 2yr -1bps to 4.16%, 5yr -0bps to 4.23%, 10yr +0bps to 4.47%, 30yr +1bps to 4.97%
  • USD index: +$0.23 to $101.19
Yesterday oil prices tried to bounce but failed at the 200d ma. Brent crude is down over 2% today, once again getting rejected at its 200d ma and looking a potential move down to $70. US nat gas is lower as well. Metals were under pressure overnight with gold breaking back below $4k, but the complex has rallied off the worst levels despite the USD higher, as yields came off a bit. The ag complex is flat, digesting yesterday’ USDA quarterly planting and stock reports that showed tighter stocks offsetting increased planting. Crypto is making a move higher as Bitcoin tries to regain $60K and ETH holds $1600. 
Markets in Asia were mixed overnight. In Japan the Yen continued to hit new lows though the Nikkei ended with modest gains. Tech, financials and manufacturing led to the upside offsetting losses in healthcare, transportation and consumer facing companies. South Korea’s Kospi fell 2% as Samsung and SK Hynix pulled back. The Hang Seng was closed for holiday. In China the Shanghai Composite was up about 0.5%. The Rating Dog Manufacturing PMI was about in line with estimates and last month.  

European indices ended mixed with Germany and UK up modestly while France lagged (Total, Engie, Sanofi, Schneider down 3-4% each). Autos bounced and were among the best performing groups while Energy and Utilities lagged. The ECB is considering doubling the reserve requirement that deposit banks need to park in interest-free accounts at their national central banks, from 1% to 2%. This would, among other things, lower interest payments on reserves, especially for cash-rich banks like Germany’s Bundesbank, and soak up excess liquidity. Eurozone inflation surprised to the downside on both headline and core. Final Eurozone manufacturing PMI slightly firmer versus flash reading. France and Germany saw modestly higher revisions to their final manufacturing PMIs while UK was revised a little lower.
Earnings:
Pre-Market: FDS, GIS, MSM, UNF
After-Market: BSET, FC, GBX
Pre-Market (Thrs): LNN

Economic Data:
US:
  • Mortgage Apps w.w: 0.5% vs -0.6% prior
  • Refis: -0.7% vs 3.0% prior
  • 30yr Rate: 6.57% prior 6.59%
  • Challenger Job Cuts: 45.8k prior 97k
  • ADP Employment Change: 98K vs. 113k cons, prior 122k
  • S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (final): 53.9 vs flash 55.7
  • ISM Manufacturing: 53.3 vs 54.0 cons, prior 54.0
  • Construction Spending m.m: 0.1% vs 0.2% cons, prior 0.3%
  • Oil Inventories: -3.775M vs -5.1M cons, prior -6.088M
  • API inventories (last night): -6.072M vs -4.1M cons, prior -0.765M  
Global:
  • China Rating Dog Manufacturing PMI: 51.7 vs. 51.6 cons., prior 51.8
  • South Korea Imports / Exports y.y: 30.1% / 70.9% prior 20.7% / 53.4%
  • South Korea Manufacturing PMI: 52.1 prior 54.8
  • Japan Manufacturing PMI (final): 54.8 vs flash 54.9
  • Japan Consumer Confidence: 33.8 vs. 34 cons., prior 33.6
  • EU CPI / Core y.y: 2.8% / 2.4% vs. 3% / 2.6% cons, prior 3.2% / 2.6%
  • EU Manufacturing PMI (final): 51.4 vs flash 51.3
STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Michael P. Reinking- Sr. Market Strategist
Published on 7/1/26 (a/o 9:00 am)
Good morning,
 
The first half of the year is in the books, and the market has a very different complexion than it did when Q1 wrapped up. There were double digit gains across most major US indices in Q2, but keep in mind that markets were at YTD lows right at the end of the first quarter. Traders were mispositioned for a de-escalation in Iran and a phenomenal earnings season added to the scramble. To start the quarter pretty much everything rallied but as we moved into May tech took over the leadership position as yields started to move higher despite oil prices topping out. In the middle of the month the tech trade also began to evolve with investors following the money - punishing the hyperscaler AI Capex spending which was devouring their cash flow and moving into the beneficiaries - semiconductor and memory stocks. That continued throughout the month of June as you can see with the nearly 20% outperformance of the ICE Semi Index relative to the NYSE FANG+ during the month. In June the breadth improved with small and midcaps outperforming as healthcare, industrials and financials led the way.
 

 
Yesterday in a quiet session with thoughts of barbeques and fireworks entering the collective consciousness the quarter ended on a positive note. There was a risk on tone with defensive/yield-oriented sectors, which had been outperforming recently, pulling back. It was fitting that semis which have outperformed across pretty much every time frame this year led to the upside. Thematic favs were also moving higher with robotics, space and rare earths moving higher though crypto continued to be under pressure with Bitcoin and Ethereum holding just above the YTD lows.
 
US futures have been modestly lower overnight. About a half an hour ago Bloomberg reported that Meta (+>5%), which has been one of the most aggressive companies during this investment cycle, is forming a new cloud business to sell compute capacity. Semis and memory stocks were modestly lower and have since taken an additional leg to the downside since the report (SMH -2.5%, DRAM -8%). On the flip side of that software has been moving modestly higher (IGV +1.5%). Microsoft is expected to announce another round of layoffs next week. According to Anthropic the Commerce Department has lifted export controls on Claude Fable 5 and Mythos 5 models. S&P, Dow and Russell 2k futures are down ~0.3%.
 

 
This morning’s ADP Employment Report came in slightly below estimates up 98k. Services accounted for pretty much all the job creation with about half of that coming from education and health services. There were gains across small (+53k), mid (+29k) and large companies (+25k). Wages for job stayers were unchanged from last month at 4.4% while job changers ticked up slightly to 6.6%. Challenger job cuts fell to 45.8 from 97k last month the lowest since December 2025 with layoffs concentrated in technology. Yields have moved up slightly overnight extending yesterday’s move ahead of the “Policy Panel” at the ECB’s Sintra Conference which will feature BoE’s Bailey, ECB’s Lagarde, BoC’s Macklem and Fed Chair Warsh. Yields in Europe have been moving higher particularly at the long end after reports that the ECB is considering doubling reserve requirements to limit the central bank’s interest rate burden. The USD is moving higher against most crosses.
 
  • US 2yr +1bps to 4.19%, 5yr +2bps to 4.25%, 10yr +2bps to 4.50%, 30yr +3bps to 4.99%
  • USD index: +$0.31 to $101.27
 
Markets in Asia were mixed overnight. In Japan the Yen continued to hit new lows though the Nikkei ended with modest gains. Tech, financials and manufacturing led to the upside offsetting losses in healthcare, transportation and consumer facing companies. South Korea’s Kospi fell 2% as Samsung and SK Hynix pulled back. The Hang Seng was closed for holiday. In China the Shanghai Composite was up about 0.5%. The Rating Dog Manufacturing PMI was about in line with estimates and last month.  European indices are mostly lower but off the worst levels. Financials, consumer and energy are leading to the downside while tech outperforms.
 

 
Yesterday oil prices tried to bounce but failed at the 200d ma and are retesting the recent lows again down ~1%. Metals were under pressure again overnight with gold breaking back below 4k, but the complex has rallied off the worst levels despite the USD moving higher. Yesterday the USDA released its quarterly planting and stock reports with tighter stocks offsetting increased planting sending the complex higher and that is extending to the upside this morning. Crypto retested the YTD lows overnight tried to bounce but is fading again.
 

 
There have been a handful of earnings. Nike is modestly lower as the company continues to highlight a difficult operating environment. Constellation Brands and General Mills are both higher after their results. On a somewhat related note, Kroger is buying Giant Eagle for $1.65B.  
 
Earnings:
After-Market:  HUBG, NKE, PRGS, STZ
Pre-Market: FDS, GIS, MSM, UNF         
After-Market: SBX
 
Economic Data:
US:
  • Mortgage Apps: 0% w/w prior 1%; 30yr Rate: 6.57% prior 6.59%
  • Challenger Job Cuts: 45.8k prior 97k
  • ADP Employment Change: vs. 113k cons., prior 122k
  • 9:45 S&P Global Manufacturing PMI (final)
  • 10:00 ISM Manufacturing
  • 10:00 Construction Spending
  • 10:30 Oil Inventories
Global:
  • China Rating Dog Manufacturing PMI: 51.7 vs. 51.6 cons., prior 51.8
  • South Korea Imports/Exports: 30.1%/70.9% prior 20.7%/53.4%
  • South Korea PMI: 52.1 prior 54.8
  • Japan Manufacturing PMI (final): 54.8 prior 54.9
  • Japan Consumer Confidence: 33.8 vs. 34 cons., prior 33.6
  • EU CPI/Core: 2.8%/2.4% vs. 3%/2.6% cons., prior 3.2%/2.6%
  • EU Manufacturing PMI (final): 51.4 prior 51.3

By submitting this form you hereby expressly grant permission to use the information included thereunder to contact you for the purposes of sending periodic updates about ICE and/or its affiliates.  Certain indices mentioned above are administered by ICE Data Indices, LLC.

Your contact information will not be used for any purpose other than that for which your consent has been given. To learn more about our privacy policy, please click here.

© 2025 Intercontinental Exchange, Inc.  All rights reserved. Intercontinental Exchange and ICE are trademarks of Intercontinental Exchange, Inc. or its affiliates.  For more information regarding registered trademarks, limitations, restrictions, and other important information, please visit intercontinentalexchange.com/terms-of-use.