STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Eric Criscuolo - Market Strategist
Published on 6/10/26 (a/o 2:00 pm)
DOW 50,215 (-657), S&P 500 7,310 (-77), Russell 2000 2,864 (-3), NYSE FANG+ 9,325 (-141), ICE Brent Crude $93.71/barrel (+$2.26), Gold $4,140/oz (-$147), Bitcoin ~61.9k (+141)
  • Hoping the Knicks bounce back better than stocks
  • Not much help from a cool-ish CPI print
  • Sectors mixed; Energy, Staples leading, Industrials lagging
  • Oil hgher
  • Check out some of the recent ICE Data/Content:
  • Inside the ICE House
  • Episode 538: Link Logistics CEO Luke Petherbridge on Supply Chains, Speed and Last-Mile Demand
  • 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:
Yesterday was a volatile session. The S&P 500’s 3.3% intraday range was the second largest over the past year and 21st largest over the past 5 years. Tech started higher but broke down on several headlines: Crusoe announcing a delay in a big data center project, a report by SemiAnalysis questioning the rollout of Co-Packaged Optics (CPO) in AI infrastructure among them. Just after noon, President Trump’s comments that the US must react to the downing of a US military helicopter sent the overall index to its worst levels, below Friday’s lows and just above the 50d ma. Shortly after Trump’s comments, a NYT story suggesting discussions about a 15yr enrichment suspension helped markets bounce. Tech and other thematic/speculative favorites led to the downside, raising more question around equity supply. More range data: The NYSE Semi index traded in >10% intraday range, down 8.5% at the lows before ending down 1.6%.

Despite the headline vol, brent crude never got significantly above Monday’s close on Trump’s comments and ended the day down 3%. Even at the lows, breadth within the market was positive. The S&P 500 ended down 0.3% but the equal-weight and small/midcap indices ended up ~1%, excluding the R2K which was dragged down by momentum/thematic favorites. Tech ended lower but well off its worst levels.

Futures were trading lower this morning on more bellicose comments from Trump (“they will pay a hefty price…”). A better-than-expected CPI print pulled rates lower and sent futures higher ahead of the open, though all that did was allow the S&P 500 to open down 0.5%. The equal-weight and small caps were a little better but still started lower as well. Early tech weakness was again a drag. The S&P quickly rallied into slightly positive territory after the Open but was unable to do hold the move. The S&P is currently down ~1%, just above the lows of the day. The equal-weight, mid-and small caps are lower but outperforming.  
Industrials is the lagging sector. Freight names were pressured on news Amazon would expand its less-than-truckload freight offering. The weakness is broadly sprayed across the sector though with airlines, defense, construction, electric and construction names all notably lower. Discretionary is lagging as well, with autos, travel & leisure and homebuilders leading lower. Energy is the outperformer on commodity strength and the defensive Staples sector is higher as well.
The market’s desire (or ability) to absorb equity supply has been a hot topic. Supermicro is down sharply today after becoming the latest tech company to announce a capital raise. In a FT story, “Goldman Sachs estimates net supply of equity in the US — measured by new shares hitting the market less equity removed by buybacks or companies going private — will be almost flat in 2026, having been in negative territory since 2003.”

CPI was the major data release today and as we noted came in a bit cooler than expected. Headline was inline, up 0.5% m.m and 4.2% y.y, driven primarily by energy as expected, while food moderated. Core was up 0.2% versus last month, a tenth better than expected. The 2.9% y.y increase was inline and up from 2.8% last month.

Last month’s jump in shelter related to the government shutdown reversed this month. New vehicles, medical care commodities (drugs) and transportation services (mostly vehicle insurance) all declined. Fed fund expectations for December are largely unchanged from yesterday following the print.
Treasury yields are off their post-CPI lows (which didn’t move a whole lot) and the curve has bear steepened with the 2y flat and 10/30y up 2bp. The US Dollar Index is flat.

  • US 2yr -0bps to 4.12%, 5yr +1bps to 4.26%, 10yr +2bps to 4.54%, 30yr +2bps to 5.02%
  • USD index: -$0.03 to $99.86
Brent crude is up ~3%, moving higher on Trump’s “hefty price” comments this morning and continuing to climb throughout the day. Crude inventories continue to be drawn down. Today’s EIA data showed inventories falling over 7M barrels. The API reported a 9.1M draw last night. Global reserve drawdowns have helped mitigate upward pressure on crude prices since the Iran conflict began, but that lever can only be pressed for so long before systematic issues begin to take hold (tank thresholds, etc.). Gas is also higher in both the US and Europe. The US will release liquefied natural gas and petroleum gas from strategic reserves to sell to ASEAN countries, according to the Deputy Sec. of State Christopher Landau.
Metals are lower with gold weak in particular, breaking down further after the 200d ma failed as support last week. Copper is down as well, approaching the rising 50d ma after trading near all-time highs earlier this month. Bitcoin is around unchanged, trying to hold above $62K. ETH is slightly lower but have bounced a bit off the lows <$1500 a few days ago. Ag is trading around unchanged outside of soybean’s 1% gain after hitting a four-month low. The monthly WASDE report will be released tomorrow. 
Markets in Asia were mostly lower overnight with South Korea leading to the downside amidst the continued tech volatility. The Nikkei was down nearly 2%. Softbank fell ~8% after Bloomberg reported that its attempt to secure a $6B margin loan backed by OpenAI shares stalled. The demand in the JGB 30yr auction was weak but yields were contained. China inflation data was about inline with estimates. Indices in China/Hong Kong ended with modest losses. Major European indices were down between 0.5% - 1% but the UK’s FTSE outperformed, finishing modestly higher. Energy was higher while Industrials (Siemens -2%), Miners and autos were among the laggards.
Earnings:
  • After-Market: NAVN, ORCL, OXM, SFIX
  • Pre-Market (Thrs):  MH
  • After-Market (Thrs): ADBE, LEN, RHI, ZDGE   

Economic Data:
US:
  • Mortgage Apps: 7.3% vs prior -2.9%
  • Refis: 15.3% vs prior -2.3%
  • 30yr Rate: 6.6% prior 6.57%
  • CPI: 0.5% / 4.2% m.m / y.y vs. 0.5% / 4.2% cons., prior 0.6% / 3.8%
  • Core-CPI: 0.2% / 2.9% m.m / y.y vs. 0.3% / 2.9% cons., prior 0.4%
  • EIA Oil Inventories: -7.228M vs -4M cons, prior -7.974M
  • API inventories (Tues AMC): -9.119M vs -3.4 cons, prior -6.75M

Global:
  • China CPI: -0.1%/1.2% m.m/y.y vs. -0.2%/1.3% cons., ,prior 0.3%/1.2%
  • China PPI: 3.9% vs. 3.9% cons., prior 2.8%
  • China Vehicle Sales: -2.1% prior -2.5%
STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Michael P. Reinking, CFA - Sr. Market Strategist
Published on 6/10/26 (a/o 9:00 am)
Good morning,
 
Yesterday was a wildly volatile session. Following another round of tech headlines (OpenAI filing, Anthropic Mythos release) and deal announcements (AVGO/APO/BX), the sector was once again leading to the upside after the open after. However, that was like Stephon Castle head fake and the sector came under significant pressure, pushing the S&P 500 below Friday’s lows. Tech and other thematic/speculative favorites lead to the downside, raising some question as to how much of this was traders making room for Friday’s SpaceX IPO. Not helping sentiment was an announcement by data center developer Crusoe that it was pausing its project in Wyoming at the request of the undisclosed customer. To put the weakness in perspective, the NYSE Semi index traded in >10% intraday range down 8.5% at the lows before ending down 1.6%. President Trump’s post on social media in the middle of the day, suggesting a retaliation for the downed helicopter sent markets to fresh lows. However, shortly thereafter a NYT story suggesting discussions about a 15yr enrichment suspension helped markets bounce. A couple of notes - despite the headlines oil prices ended down ~3% holding just above the mid-May lows and never sniffed turning positive. It is also worth noting that even at the lows breadth within the market was positive. The S&P 500 ended down 0.3% but the equal-weight and small/midcap indices ended up ~1% excluding the R2K which was dragged down by momentum/thematic favorites like space, nuclear, quantum and rare earths.
 
Futures were drifting lower overnight and accelerated to the downside this morning as President Trump’s Iran rhetoric turned more hostile again. Ahead of CPI tech headlines continued to dominate the press. There are some more potential circular financing deals and capital raises - OpenAI is reportedly negotiating a 20yr lease of a 10GW datacenter in Ohio with Nvidia potentially involved in the financing. Supermicro is the most recent tech company to raise capital ($7B) while neo-data center co.’s HUT/APLD both closed previously announced financings. The supply has become a hot topic, a FT story notes, “Goldman Sachs estimates net supply of equity in the US — measured by new shares hitting the market less equity removed by buybacks or companies going private — will be almost flat in 2026, having been in negative territory since 2003.”
 

 
Equity futures have bounced back after CPI came in slightly better than expected. Headline was inline up 0.5% and 4.2% m.m/y.y, driven primarily by energy while food moderated. Core was up 0.2%, a tenth better than expected with y/yin inline up 2.9% up from 2.8% last month. Last month there was a big jump in shelter related to the government shutdown which reversed this month. New vehicles, medical care commodities and transportation services driven by declines in vehicle insurance. Treasury yields are about 3bps off the overnight highs hovering around unchanged. The USD index tested $100 again overnight but has pulled back modestly since the data. S&P futures are down ~0.5%, cutting losses in half. Russell 2k futures are a touch lower after turning slightly positive. Once again it’s worth noting, despite all the rhetoric oil prices are up less than 1%.
 

 
Government Yields
 
  *   US 2yr -1bps to 4.12%, 5yr +0bps to 4.25%, 10yr +0bps to 4.53%, 30yr +1bps to 5.01%
  *   USD index: +$0.01 to $99.90
 
Markets in Asia were mostly lower overnight with South Korea leading to the downside amidst the continued tech volatility. The Nikkei was down nearly 2%. Softbank fell  ~8% after Bloomberg reported that its attempt to secure a $6B margin loan backed by OpenAI shares stalled. The demand in the 30yr auction was weak but yields were contained. China inflation data was about inline with estimates. Indices in China/Hong Kong ended with modest losses. Major European indices were down between 0.5% - 1% at the lows with multiple markets testing their respective 50d ma’s, but have bounced back to around unchanged levels after the US inflation data.
 

 
Commodities are mixed. Energy prices are moving modestly higher. Metals have been under pressure for the last couple of days with both gold and silver breaking below their respective 200d ma’s. That weakness is continuing this morning with gold down ~2.5% at $4,175 while silver is down ~1%. Ag is moving higher. Crypto was under pressure again overnight but also has improved since the data with only modest declines.
 

Trucking stocks are getting hit hard in the pre-market after Amazon announced it would expand its less-than-truckload freight offering as part of its Amazon Supply Chain Services. Chewy, Cracker Barrel and Casey’s Stores are all trading higher after reporting earnings. Oracle reports after the close.
 
Earnings:
After-Market: BARK, CASY, CBRL. CNM, DOMO, LAKE, SKILL
Pre-Market: CHWY, JILL
After-Market: NAVN, ORCL, OXM, SFIX
 
Economic Data:
US:
  • Mortgage Apps: 10.8% w/w prior -2.5%
    • 30yr Rate 6.6% prior 6.57%
  • CPI: 0.5%/4.2% m.m/y.y vs. 0.5%/4.2% cons., prior 0.6%/3.8%
  • Core-CPI: 0.2%/2.9% m.m/y.y vs. 0.3%/2.9% cons., prior 0.4"
  • 10:30 Oil Inventories
Global: 
  • China CPI: -0.1%/1.2% m.m/y.y vs. -0.2%/1.3% cons., ,prior 0.3%/1.2% 
  • China PPI: 3.9% vs. 3.9% cons., prior 2.8% 
  • China Vehicle Sales: -2.1% prior -2.5% 
 

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