NYSE MAC Desk

Weekly Recap:

STRAIGHT FROM THE TRADING FLOOR
by Eric Criscuolo & MIchael Reinking, CFA
Published on 6/12/26
DOW 51,202 (+354), S&P 500 7,431 (+37), Russell 2000 2,944 (+23), NYSE FANG+ 9,725 (+67), ICE Brent Crude $86.76/barrel (-$3.62), Gold $4,235/oz (+$121), Bitcoin ~63.4k (-57)
The S&P 500’s 9-week winning streak came to an end last week, thanks in part to a strong monthly jobs report on Friday that sent treasury yields higher, pressuring equities and piling onto already-present tech weakness to push the index into the red for the week.  

This week Iran news continued to cross the tape with variations on an established theme. That theme being: the US and Iran exchange fire overnight, without further escalation, and follow-up reports continue to say negotiations continue. Rinse. Repeat. Markets still reacted to these updates but it felt like the magnitude of the reactions had moderated. However later in the week we maybe - MAYBE - took a significant step towards a resolution. Looking beyond geopolitical news, there was a lot to digest, especially in the Tech space.

Equities began this week with a modest bounce on Monday from Friday’s losses. However it was basically all Tech as almost every other sector was lower. As the week progressed, this dynamic flip-flopped. Tuesday saw Tech weakness return while the rest of the market was strong. Wednesday brought this week’s most important data- the latest CPI report (discussed in more detail below). It wasn’t a hot number but remained well-above the Fed’s 2% target. Yields moved higher- the long end in particular, but it didn’t really explain the magnitude of the equity weakness that followed. Tech was hit the hardest as the rotation continued to play out. There were legitimate questions of how much of the tech weakness was investors selling names to free up funds for the SpaceX IPO on Friday- or on the other hand to take exposures down ahead of a potential volatile event.   

At its low on Thursday the S&P was looking at a ~2% decline for the week. Potentially the second down week in a row after a run of gains. Maybe drawing parallels to…the New York Knickerbockers? The Spurs ended the Knicks 13 game playoff winning streak in Game 3 of the NBA finals, and then looked like they were putting the Knicks on a losing streak after going up 29 points in Game 4. Instead, the Knicks, like an epic short squeeze on a triple-levered ETF at the lows, produced an insane, record-breaking, come from behind victory.  And what happened Thursday afternoon in the markets? Right on queue, with markets sagging, President Trump posted that a “framework for an agreement” on Iran was reached, with a list that included multiple Middle Eastern countries. We’ll leave out the part that Iran was left off that list of countries. Anyway, oil fell through the floor, yields dropped and equities jumped, but not quite as high as OG Anunoby on that game-winning tip-in. 
Equities extended those gains on Friday. The late-week strength pushed the S&P 500 to a 0.6% gain. The equal-weight showcased strong breadth, rising almost 2%. Nine of eleven sectors were higher. The large and mega cap growth names that have propelled the index higher for seemingly all of eternity actually fell about 1%. Basically everything else stepped up in their place. Small caps ripped 4%. However space names got torched on the launchpad of the SpaceX IPO on Friday.
The S&P 500 came close to but never quite tested its 50d moving average before reversing higher to end the week on a high note. 
Materials, Financials and Staples were the leading sectors this week. Materials benefitted from the fall in crude. Positive commentary at investor conferences helped Financials, and several exchanges and asset managers saw strength after general weakness the past month. Staples made most of their move higher earlier in the week. Positive takeaways from Smucker’s earnings helped the group. Tech  was about in line with the index but it was a Tale of Two groups: Semis flew. Software crashed. Comm Services was at the bottom this week. Meta fell 4% and Alphabet 2%, supplying most of the pressure as mega caps were under pressure for most of the week. Media was also mostly lower though Charter was up 10%, rebounding from multi-year lows. Energy lagged on oil’s decline.
The tech sector’s weakness in June was generating considerable attention for obvious reasons.  Since peaking on June 2, the XLK (Tech), DRAM (Memory) and NYSX (NYSE 100) ETFs were all down ~10% coming into Thursday. The IGV software ETF was down 7 straight days after a scorching rally from down over 25% YTD to even. 
With several potential reasons for the weakness (profit-taking, positioning for IPOs, concern about AI ROIC among them), we saw signals that some of this was just rotating to other equity areas. Despite the S&P 500 down 2% in June, the equal-weight is up 1% and small cap indexes 2-3%. Lagging areas like Healthcare and Financials that were down YTD saw gains as tech swooned.

The rally on Thursday and Friday was led by Tech, Materials and Industrials- 3 of the leading sectors YTD and which sold off since June 2.  The long semis/short software trade was back in a big way this week. The NYSE Semis index rose over 10% while the IGV software ETF fell over 5%. It was the second worst underperformance for software vs. semis in five years. Neoclouds like CoreWeave were strong on Thursday and Friday.
This week also continued to showcase the growing need for companies to raise capital to fund AI-related spend. It also highlighted how considerably more discerning investors are becoming to these events. Super Micro got pummeled, down 27% after announcing a $7B equity raise.

Oracle released solid earnings with strong growth but also announced the company was looking to raise another ~$20B of equity in FY27, on top of the $20B previously announced. The stock sold off after the print. Relatedly, Broadcom along with Apollo and Blackstone announced a $35B agreement for BX and APO to finance the buildout of 20GW of compute capacity using Broadcom chips through 2028. That includes Anthropic’s 1GW this year. It’s also another mark for the AI-circularity Bears. With all this spending, it didn’t help that the WSJ reported that OpenAI was considering “drastic” price cuts for its tokens, in anticipation of a price war with Anthropic.

An FT story this week shined a light on another angle of concern around all the AI spending. “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.” The massive cash flows that supported enormous share buyback programs are disappearing, along with the steady corporate bid underlying the equity market for years.

While AI dominates the cycle, a flurry of broker conferences provided corporate updates across the general economy, and they were largely sanguine, supporting the view that the economy, and consumers overall, remain healthy.

  • Capital One: Management has a “quite positive view…The consumer is really the strong shoulders the economy stands on.”
  • Fifth Third: Charge-offs and delinquencies are well-behaved and consumers are still spending.
  • Truist: Commercial and consumer confidence remains robust with only minor stress in lower-income groups. There’s been no material deterioration observed in credit.
  • American Express: Demand was strong for new cards. Credit metrics across all customer segments are healthy and they see no material negative impact from inflation on customer spend.
  • Smucker: The company reported a strong beat and solid guide and noted that coffee deflation will be passed along to customers.
  • Campbell's: During the company’s earnings call management noted consumers are cautious and intentional with their spending, and engaging in value-seeking behavior (e.g. cooking at home versus going out). Management also noted the trend toward healthier eating.
  • Carrier: Residential and light commercial demand in North America and Europe outperforming expectations in H1 2026.
  • Walmart: Noted higher income customers continue to spend with confidence. Lower income customers are making tradeoffs especially in discretionary categories.
Economic Data/Fed
Last week was employment week and this was inflation. Inflation has been accelerating and remains above the Fed’s targets - though this week’s numbers were no worse than feared. Markets largely took the numbers in stride as they were somewhat overshadowed by the geopolitical headlines, as the increase in energy has been the primary driver.

Headline CPI was inline with expectations up 0.5%, down a touch from last month, while annual accelerated to 4.2% from 3.8% last month. The increases were primarily driven by energy while food moderated. Core was up 0.2%, a tenth better than expected while the annual reading was inline at 2.9% up from 2.8% last month. Last month there was a big jump in shelter related to the government shutdown which reversed. New vehicles, medical care commodities and transportation services driven by declines in vehicle insurance all fell. 
Headline PPI was higher than expected though the prior month was revised lower. It was the highest reading since November 2022. Core was lower than expected and prior also revised lower. Final Demand Goods rose 2.8% m.m- the largest increase since the data was first published in Dec 2009. Energy’s 10.7% increase drove 80% of the change. Final Demand Services Rose 0.3%. The volatile Trade Services (ie margins) fell 1.1% (rose 1.3% prior month). Transportation and warehousing, a segment we’ve been highlighting, rose 2.6%. 
The inflation expectations within the NY Fed’s Consumer Survey held steady while they fell in this morning’s U of Mich. Sentiment Survey (which is known to be more volatile) to 4.6% and 3.4% on a 1 and 5-yr horizons down from 4.8% and 3.9%, respectively. 
This week’s labor market data leaned a bit on the weaker side but didn’t signify any meaningful shift. Jobless claims came in higher than expected at 229k. It’s the third straight weekly increase for initial claims and is just below the YTD high, though the absolute level is relatively low. Continuing claims also ticked up but remained below 1.8ml. The ADP weekly job report showed 29k private jobs/week were added over the past 4 weeks, roughly inline with the prior reading of 30.5k, which was revised down from 35.75k. Within the NFIB Business Optimism survey job openings and hiring plans dropped to lowest level in six years.
This leads into next week’s FOMC Policy decision which will be Kevin Warsh’s first as Chairman. The recent economic data does not support the rate cuts that he discussed during his interview process leaving him in a difficult spot with a demanding boss. If the boss can craft a resolution in the Strait that would potentially make his job a little bit easier. The market widely expects the statement to evolve, removing the easing bias, which drew three dissents last meeting. With the head of dissenter Island, Stephen Miran, is off the Committee there is a chance we see a unanimous vote. It will be interesting to see how Chair Warsh positions himself, but I would expect any of the changes he has pushed for - change in communication and balance sheet management - to evolve over time. One of the dovish talking points the Chair had during his interview process was his view that AI would act as a structural disinflationary force. That may end up being the case down the road but during the current Capex-Boom phase we’re in now, it is having the opposite effect (see below). 
Yields have moved lower this week mostly in response to the geopolitical headlines with some flattening of the curve as markets have walked back some of the hawkish Fed expectations. 
Commodities and Crypto - Oil up, metals down, crypto smashed
  • Energy - Oil prices moved sharply lower for the 3rd week in 4 falling over 5%. ICE Brent broke below the May lows (~$90) over the last two days tagging the 100dma overnight. Natural gas prices in the US and Europe moved lower.   
  • Metals - had been under pressure recently with the USD strength and markets pricing in a more hawkish Fed. This week both gold and silver broke below their respective 200d ma’s before a sharp reversal over the last day. Peak to trough gold is down 27% from its January high. Silver was down nearly 50%. Copper has been outperforming with speculation that President Trump could make an announcement on tariffs by the end of the month. 
  • Agriculture - This week’s WASDE report showed a cut in wheat production by 18ml bushels to 1.54ml due to the drought conditions. Projections for corn/soy were virtually unchanged. Wheat ended the week with modest gains reversing some of the losses since mid-May (down 18%). Corn and soy ended modestly lower.

  • Crypto - has bounced modestly after retesting the February lows last week. Last week we noted that sentiment worsened after the OG HODL’r Michael Saylor sold 32 Bitcoin (0.0038% of holdings at the time)  to fund dividends. There was speculation he was selling more over the weekend however, the company announced that it raised ~$180ml in an ATM offering to buy 1,550 Bitcoin (at ~$65k) which helped to turn things around. The RSI for Bitcoin had gotten deeply oversold as we approached the previous lows which has led to a technical bounce. 60k remains a key level to the downside. First level to watch on the upside is 64.5k the recent highs and then see how it interacts with the declining 20d which is ~68k. 
Global Equities - it was a mixed week around the globe with tech heavy indices in Asia underperforming. 

  • Europe - with today’s rally most major indices in the region ended with gains after testing their respective 50d ma’s. Germany’s Dax underperformed as SAP fell nearly 15% with the weakness in software. The two Siemens companies were also down ~3%. The ECB raised its policy rate by 25bp as expected. Inflation expectations were revised higher and GDP lower. President Lagarde noted the Iran conflict caused a sharp increase in energy costs and that the rate increase was implemented to prevent that from embedding more deeply into broader prices. She maintained optionality about further action but press reports since suggest the central bank would remain on hold in July if energy prices didn’t push back up to fresh highs.     
  • Sough Korea - South Korea’s Kospi triggered a circuit breaker shortly after the open on Monday (3rd time this year) and ended the session down over 8% (opened down 1.4%). The Korea Exchange held an emergency meeting to discuss the volatility. A joint statement by financial authorities noted, “excessive volatility or one-sided market concentration would not be tolerated”.  Korean yields jumped ~10bps at the long-end and speculation around currency intervention after a month of weakening . Things calmed down throughout the remainder of the week with the index ending only slightly lower. 
  • Japan - The Nikkei also ended with slight losses. BOJ Governor Ueda was hospitalized and is expected to miss next week’s policy meeting. The central bank is still expected to hike rates but this adds an additional layer of uncertainty around communication. 
  • China/Hong Kong - The country’s trade balance rose more than expected in May. Export and import growth were both above consensus and up from April. Global stockpiling likely contributed a temporary push to the numbers. However, oil imports fell to their lowest levels since 2017 as the country draws down inventories in the midst of the Iran conflict. Inflation data was about inline with estimates China inflation data was about inline with estimates. According to reports the Chinese government is considering a $300B, 5-yr program to build data centers across the country. The US Dept of Defense updated its list of “Chinese military companies”- entities it views as providing, commercial services, manufacturing, producing, or exporting for China’s military. Several big names including Baidu, WuXi, BYD, and Alibaba were added, and the WSJ said those companies disagreed with their inclusion and will look to remove themselves from it. Companies on the list are barred from doing business with the U.S. military. 
What's on Tap Next Week
The Federal Reserve will hold its first interest rate meeting under new chair Kevin Warsh on Wednesday. With the decision to keep rates unchanged all but a done deal, the focus will be on how Warsh conducts his first post-meeting press conference compared to Powell. Retail Sales, Industrial Production, Housing Starts and Sales and the weekly jobless claims will also hit the tape next week. Markets will be closed on Friday for Juneteenth. Most importantly, we’ll find out if the Knicks can bring home that championship that’s been 53 years in the making. One way or another the NBA Finals wraps up by the end of the week. Game 5 is on Saturday. Go Knicks!    
Calendar
  • Weekend - Knicks Game!
  • Monday -  G7 Leaders Summit Begins (6/15 - 6/17)
  • Broker Conferences:  
  • Earnings Pre-Market:
  • Economic Data:
  • US: Empire Manufacturing, Industrial Production, NAHB Housing
  • Global: Germany/India Wholesale Prices
  • Earnings After-Market:
  • Auctions: US 3/6mo, Korea 10yr, Germany 1yr, France 3/6/12mo
  • Agriculture: NOPA
  • Tuesday -
  • Broker conferences:
  • Earnings Pre-Market: WLY
  • Economic data:
  • US: Weekly ADP, Housing Starts, Im/Ex Prices, NY Fed Services          
  • Global: South Korea Import/Export Prices, China Industrial Production/Retail Sales/Unemployment/FAI, EU/Germany ZEW Survey
  • Central Banks:
  • Rate Decision: BOJ, Australia
  • Auctions: US 20yr, Germany 5yr. UK 10yr
  • Energy: API Crude Inventories
  • Earnings After-Market:  LZB           
  • Wednesday -
  • Broker conferences:
  • Earnings Pre-Market: JBL, KMX 
  • Economic data:
  • U.S: Retail Sales, Pending Home Sales, Inventories, Mortgage apps
  • Global: India Balance of Trade, UK Inflation,
  • Central Banks:
  • Rate Decision: FOMC Policy Decision, Riksbank, Brazil
  • Energy: EIA Inventories
  • Auctions: EU 3/612mo
  • Earnings After-Market: SWBI
  • Thursday -  Triple Witch Expiration/S&P Quarterly Index Rebalances
  • Broker conferences:
  • Earnings Pre-Market: ACN, KR
  • Economic data
  • US: Jobless Claims, Philly Fed Manuf., Leading Indicators      
  • Global: UK Employment, EU Current Account/Constructon, Canada PPI
  • Central Banks
  • Rate Decisions: BoE, SNB, Indonesia, Norway
  • Fed Balance Sheet
  • Auctions: Japan 1yr, France 3-15yr, Spain 7/10/14yr
  • Energy: EIA Natural Gas Inventories
  • Treasury: TIC Flows
  • Earnings After-Market: 
  • Friday - US Markets Closed for Juneteenth
  • Earnings Pre-Market:
  • Economic data
  • US: None
  • Global: South Korea PPI, Japan inflation, Germany PPI, UK/Canada Retail Sales,
  • Central Banks
  • Fed Commercial Bank Balance Sheets
  • Auctions: None
  • CFTC COT
  • Energy: Rig Count
  • Earnings After-Market: None


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