Geopolitics came back into the fray, not completely out of the blue, with the NATO Summit taking place in Turkey. The US responded to ships being fired upon in the Strait leading a frustrated President Trump to declare the end of the ceasefire during an appearance on Wednesday. The Iran news caused some volatility as traders broke out the typical macro conflict playbook, but the overall moves were muted and short lived as investors continue to discount a significant escalation of kinetic activity ahead of midterms. As President George Bush once said, “Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me…..You Can’t get fooled again!”
ICE Brent, which had been consolidating in the lows 70’s for the last couple weeks moved up to ~$80 but pulled back into the mid-70’s with reports that negotiations are occurring again, though President Trump said while those talks happen “the United States has stated to them, in no uncertain terms, that the Cease Fire is OVER!”. While at the Summit President Trump also discussed Greenland, potentially pulling troops from Europe and loudly voiced his disappointment with Spain. Russia and Ukraine was also a hot topic as the conflict continues and the latter gets more aggressive with drone attacks.
The sector level activity was mixed this week and at the extremes it was a mirror image of last week with tech-heavy sectors outperforming and healthcare and other defensive/yield-oriented sectors pulling back. For obvious reasons energy was one of the best performing sectors. Materials fell ~2% with weakness in TiO₂ companies (housing related), construction materials and packaging stocks. Steel and ag chemical companies ended with gains.
Consumer Discretionary ended the week higher helped by gains in auto-related and the mega-caps while housing/travel related stocks were under pressure. That housing/travel related weakness also showed up within industrials, building products and airlines moving lower. This morning Delta Air Lines reported a strong quarter absorbing “the highest quarterly fuel expense” in its history. Management highlighted strong demand with momentum continuing into 2H. Within the broader sector aerospace and defense stocks underperformed while the AI/energy infrastructure companies didn’t really bounce back with the tech trade. There were modest gains in logistics, rail and pockets of machinery.
After a strong run and despite continued M&A activity biotech is pulling back, weighing on healthcare. There are a couple of heavyweights reporting next week (ABT/JNJ/UNH). Speaking of earnings financials will dominate the first couple of weeks, kicking off on Tuesday (BAC/C/GS/JPM/WFC). Over the last month the sector has outperformed, reversing YTD losses. The numbers should be solid with an overall healthy economic backdrop and strong trading/capital markets activity. Management teams were on the road at conferences recently and didn't suggest any real change in credit trends so there shouldn’t be many big surprises.
Saving the biggest and best (performing) for last: The tech roundup. It’s been a rocky couple of weeks for the tech trade with the capex spending beneficiaries going parabolic into the middle of June. As that move occurred and volatility increased, that in and of itself forces some position reduction, along with some quarter-end rotational activity and an increase in supply with multiple IPOs and capital market activity. However, at the same time there were growing concerns around token maxing, the use of cheaper open-source models and the durability of capex spending.
Those concerns seemed to come to a head last week around Meta, which has been one of the most aggressive spenders in this investment cycle. A Bloomberg report suggested the company would follow a similar path as SpaceX by selling excess compute. Softbank was also reportedly entering that market next year. Earlier this week there were reports about Meta’s model advancement, refuting some claims that the company was backing away from its AI efforts. In addition, a leaked document suggested the company would double its AI compute capacity to 14GW in 2027. The company then announced $10B data center in Canada and that it would begin production of its new in-house AI chip (Iris) in September with its partners Broadcom and TSMC. These headlines along with Micron raising its planned US investment to over $250B through 2035, up from $200B, helped to stabilize the complex. For Meta the cherry on top came today after very positive reviews of its recently launched Muse Spark 1.1 sent the stock up >5%.
On the AI disruption side of the trade, Bloomberg reported that Starbucks had been using AI to develop its own in-house software systems which could potentially be rolled out by the end of the year. This initially sent software lower but much of the group bounced back. It will be interesting to see if there are more examples like this discussed during the upcoming earnings season. The IGV software ETF ended the week with modest losses. Notably over the last couple of days were cybersecurity stocks, which have been surging recently, starting to show signs of fatigue.