NYSE MAC Desk

Weekly Recap:

STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Eric Criscuolo & MIchael Reinking, CFA
Published on 6/18/26
DOW 51,624 (+131), S&P 500 7,506 (+86), Russell 2000 2,980 (+62), NYSE FANG+ 10,231 (+438), ICE Brent Crude $79.51/barrel (-$0.04), Gold $4,235/oz (-$146), Bitcoin ~62.9k (-1307)
With markets closed tomorrow for the Juneteenth Holiday, we're publishing an abridged weekly recap today, a day 50+ years in the making. For those of you who weren't around 11 Wall Street there was a Blue and Orange sea of humanity in lower Manhattan, reportedly around 2-3 million strong. And they all got there well before the Knicks championship parade down the Canyon of Heroes began.

Beyond the parade, today was an interesting session for several reasons: markets continue to digest yesterday’s Fed meeting and the official signing of the Iran MoU, as well as it being a triple witch expiration and the S&P quarterly index rebalance. The NYSE Group saw its highest volume day ever, as did the US equity market overall.

Regarding the Fed meeting yesterday, you can read our MAC Desk Fed Recap here if you missed it. At a high level, there's a new sheriff in town. Kevin Warsh assumed the Fed Chair role from Jerome Powell and quickly put his stamp on things. A unanimous vote by the FOMC left the target rate unchanged at 3.5% to 3.75%, as expected, and we could see A LOT of changes in the way the Fed operates in the coming months.

There was a swift market response. Treasury yields moving sharply higher particularly at the front end of the curve. The long end was notably well-contained. That could suggest that the market is giving the Chair a nod of credibility around his commitment to price stability. Keep in mind, however, there may also be some positioning dynamics at play as yield steepener trades were very popular with his appointment given his dovish rhetoric and expectations that he would shrink the Fed’s balance sheet. Equity markets sold off in response with major indices falling >1% yesterday.  

As investors continued to digest yesterday’s meeting yields pulled back a bit today, with a continued flattening of the curve. The 2y was only down about 1bp today. Longer tenors saw a bit more, with the 30y down 4bp. The 2/10 spread is ~25bps, the lowest level in over a year.

For the week the 2yr rose 11bp while the 10 and 30y fell 1 and 6bp, respectively.
Equities quickly got over most of their late day weakness. Futures bounced overnight and the S&P 500 opened up almost 1% and we've been hovering around that level for the day, reversing a good portion of yesterday’s selloff. The equal-weight lagged modestly, while small caps outperformed.

Today's gain puts the S&P in the green for the week (+1%). Tech and in particular Semis drove things, however, and the rest of the market was not as robust. The equal-weight fell just under 1%. Dow Transports fell 4% with weakness in the trucking/freight names on a group downgrade- though this comes after 20-40% YTD gains for them.
Tech stocks led to the upside on Bounceback Thursday, and for the week overall. NYSE Semis rose 7% on Thursday and for the week, with INTC's 10% gain on the day driving the upside. Trump posted that Apple was working with the company to design and build its chips in America. Apple is also raising prices due to memory chip costs. The DRAM ETF gained 10% and 18% for the week. Industrials were also a leading sector this week with Machinery, Airlines, Electrical and Building Products seeing strong gains. Energy was the notable laggard on oil's decline. Staples fell as well. One interesting development to keep on eye on for Tech, Utilities and Data Centers was FERC's ruling that could fast-track data center buildouts while clearing connection queues of suspect requests for interconnection, which are clogging up the pipelines.
President Trump signed the MoU Wednesday night. There are write-ups all over the place, but CNN has a pretty good one here. Ships have begun traversing the Strait. A 60-day clock now starts ticking on a final deal. This will, god-willing, include the long-term operation of the Strait and an agreement on Iran’s nuclear program. 

This week's economic/macro events revolved around the Fed and Warsh's presser. We also had retail sales, which came in ahead of expectations pretty much across the board. Headline was up 0.9% and if you strip out autos and gas it was still up a healthy 0.5%. The control group, which feeds into GDP, was up 0.7%, above the 0.4% estimate. Motor vehicle/parts, furniture/home and apparel all bounced back after declines last month while electronics, department stores and food services all fell from last month. The latter will likely bounce back next month with the World Cup providing a tailwind.
In the weekly labor data, initial claims were inline with expectations at 226k while continuing claims ticked up over 1.8ml.

Moving to global markets, European equities were mixed today but finished up on the week, though the UK lagged. Financials were strong but Energy and software services weighed on the FTSE 100. The BOE held rates as expected, as did Norway and Switzerland. The Nikkei saw strong gains both today and this week. The index pushed past 70K for the first time ever. Tech saw some notable gains this week including memory maker Kioxia (+40%), Tokyo Electron and Advantest (+25%) and SoftBank (+20%).

China’s markets were mixed. Hang Seng fell over 1% on Thursday and 3% for the week, reaching its lowest level since last July. Major tech components like Alibaba and Tencent ended the week lower, continuing there YTD slides (Alibaba, Tencent -25%). Shanghai was lower on Thursday but up for the week as the tech names in that index, more directly exposed to AI, performed well (Shengyi, Cambricon +25%). South Korea’s KOSPI is up over 10% this week, breaching 9K and looking to end a two week losing streak. 
Commodities and Crypto - It was a volatile week
  • Energy - oil prices continued to move lower this week falling around 10%. This is the fourth weekly decline in the last five with prices down ~25% over that time frame. This week ICE Brent broke below its 100d and the mid-May lows early in the week and has been making a beeline for the 200d ma currently just under $75. This week’s inventory data continued to show significant draws with stockpiles hitting the lowest level since 1985. The IEA now expects 2026 global oil demand to fall 1.1mb/d, downgrading their prior estimate by 700kb/d. 2027 demand is expected to increase 2mb/d in 2027. Supply is expected to fall by 3.9mb/d in 2026, the same as last month, but rebound by 8mb/d in 2027. That would create an oil glut next year. Natural gas prices continue to trade in a range in the low 3’s.   
  • Metals - After getting oversold the precious metals complex started to snap back at the end of last week helped by the Iran headlines and as declining oil prices started to shift the inflation/Fed narratives. That bounce continued through the front half of the week, but the complex once again turned sharply lower after yesterday’s Fed meeting. Overall losses were modest with gold/silver still holding about 5% above last week’s low but both are back under the 200d again (gold never reclaimed). Copper was down around 1% but has been consolidating for the last month just below the recent highs (see chart). 
  • Agriculture - ended the week higher with rumors that China was in the market. 
  • Crypto - has followed a similar path to the precious metals market. The Bitcoin bounce continued helped by more purchases by Strategy. However, markets are watching closely as the Stretch preferreds continue to get "stretched" from par (pun intended). The Bitcoin rally fizzled around the declining 20d ma ~67k at the time. Prices are still holding the early June lows. Traditional exchanges (CME/CBOE/ICE/NDAQ) have been under pressure throughout the week as concerns mount related to perpetual futures and tokenization after the recent CFTC rulings and reports that the SEC would unveil an “innovation exemption”. 
What's on Tap Next Week
Markets are closed tomorrow, and NYC will still be cleaning up after the Knicks parade. Key economic data next week will include PCE and Flash PMIs. Micron will release closely watched earnings, along with CCL, FDX and FDXF, among others. Qualcom will host an Investor Day. The Russell Reconstitution will happen at the close on Friday, so expects lots of volume. Until then, Enjoy your weekend and Happy Father's Day!    
Calendar
  • Weekend - Father's Day!
  • Monday -  
  • Earnings Pre-Market: FRVO
  • Economic Data:
  • US:  None
  • Global: EU Consumer Confidence, Canada CPI
  • Central Banks:
  • Rate Decision: China (LPR)
  • Speakers: ECB Lagarde in EU Parliament
  • Earnings After-Market: None
  • Auctions: US 3/6mo, Korea 5y, Canada 10y
  • Agriculture: Weekly export report
  • Tuesday -
  • Broker conferences: JPM Energy, Power, Renewables & Mining
  • Earnings Pre-Market: CCL, KFY, SUNB
  • Economic data:
  • US: ADP Weekly Employment, Flash PMIs, Richmond Fed Manuf., Philly Fed Services, Money Supply          
  • Global: Flash PMIs, Taiwan Export Orders, Korea Consumer Confidence, EU New Car Registrations, France Business Confidence
  • Auctions: US 6w/2y, Korea 20y, Japan 5y, Germany 2y
  • Energy: API Crude Inventories
  • Earnings After-Market: CBRS, FDX, ICLR, KBH, WOR            
  • Wednesday -
  • Broker conferences: JPM Energy, Power, Renewables & Mining
  • Investor Day: QCOM, CASY, FIG, IOT, SITE
  • Earnings Pre-Market: NovaGold, PAYX 
  • Economic data:
  • U.S: Mortgage apps, New Home Sales, Building Permits (final)
  • Global: Australia CPI, China FDI, Taiwan Industrial Production, Germany Ifo survey
  • Central Banks:
  • Fed Bank Stress Test Results
  • BOJ Summary of Opinions
  • Energy: EIA Inventories
  • Auctions: US 17w/5y, UK 5y, Germany 15/20y
  • Earnings After-Market: FUL, JEF, MLKN, MU, WS
  • Thursday -  
  • Investor Day: MRNA, VC
  • Earnings Pre-Market: AYI, BB, CMC, DRI, MKC, SNX, WGO, WSE
  • Economic data
  • US: PCE, Jobless Claims, GDP (final), Personal Income/Spending, Durable Goods, Chicago Fed Nat'l Index, KC Fed Manuf.       
  • Global: Korea Business Confidence, Australia Unemployment, Germany Gfk Survey, France Consumer Confidence
  • Central Banks
  • Fed Speakers: Goolsbee (AMC)
  • Fed Senior Credit Officer Opinion Survey (SCOOS)
  • Fed Balance Sheet
  • Rate Decisions: Mexico
  • ECB Economic Bulletin
  • Auctions: US 4/8w, 7y, Japan 20y
  • Energy: EIA Natural Gas Inventories
  • Earnings After-Market: FDXF
  • Friday - 
  • Russell Reconstitution (at the Close)
  • Earnings Pre-Market: APOG
  • Economic data
  • US: Goods Trade Balance, Inventories, U of Mich Survey (final), KC Fed Services
  • Global: Japan Tokyo CPI, India Loan Growth, China Industrial Profits (AMC), Italy Business Confidence, France Unemployment, Mexico Trade Balance
  • Central Banks
  • Speakers: Fed Kashkari
  • Fed Commercial Bank Balance Sheets
  • Auctions: None
  • CFTC COT
  • Energy: Rig Count
  • Earnings After-Market: None


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