MARKET COMMENTARY

Last week, investors shifted money away from AI mega-caps toward cyclical sectors and smaller companies. Inflation is proving stubborn, and U.S.-Iran tensions aren•t helping, putting upward pressure on energy prices and hardening the Fed•s resolve.

 

Here•s how the markets performed, and a look behind what drove the numbers. 

 

Stock Index Performance 

What Moved Markets

 

Inflation Continues to Stick. May•s core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) held at 3.4% year-over-year, well above the Fed•s 2% target and declining only marginally. As a reminder, core PCE reflects the prices paid for goods and services, but it does not account for the prices of goods considered more volatile, such as energy. However, despite a higher PCE, consumer spending still increased, sending a complicated message. All eyes will be on the Fed during July•s meeting to see the central bank•s take on the data.

 

Rates, the Dollar, and Commodities. The 10-year Treasury yield edged below 4.40%, but monetary policy is staying restrictive. The dollar hit a 13-month high on rate-hike expectations and a flight from riskier assets. Brent crude oil swung sharply, briefly touching four-month lows on hopes for progress in U.S.-Iran talks before reversing course after a new U.S. strike on Iranian targets. Gold held above $4,000 an ounce on geopolitical anxiety and inflation doubts.

 

The Week Ahead

 

Fresh data this week will put the higher-for-longer rate story to the test. Key releases include the ISM Manufacturing report on Wednesday, July 1; weekly jobless claims on Thursday, July 2; and the ISM Services report on Monday, July 6. Together, they will offer a clearer read on whether price pressures are easing and growth is holding up under restrictive policy.