Thursday 7/9/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks edge higher – U.S. equity markets traded higher Thursday, supported by gains in the technology sector which helped lift broader indexes. The Nasdaq outperformed, gaining more than 1%, while the S&P 500 posted a 0.8% advance. Overseas, markets were broadly higher as well, with Asian equities led by a gain of more than 1% in Japan’s Nikkei, while European markets also traded higher. On the economic front, initial jobless claims for last week came in slightly below expectations at 215,000, pointing to continued stability in the labor market. Additionally, existing home sales for June were weaker than expected, falling 2.4% for the month, as the recent run-up in longer-term interest rates has likely weighed on housing activity. Bond yields finished the day slightly lower, with the 10-year Treasury yield settling around 4.55%. In commodity markets, oil prices closed lower, though investors continue to monitor this week’s geopolitical flare-up between the U.S. and Iran, which has helped push WTI crude oil higher by more than 4% for the week.
     
  • Positioning portfolios amid the recent rotation – After a strong run in technology stocks following the March lows, markets have experienced a rotation into more value-oriented sectors since the beginning of June. Health care, financials and industrials have been among the top performers over this period, while technology has lagged, declining by roughly 5% through yesterday's close. Even so, the sector remains up more than 17% year-to-date. In our view, the weakness in technology reflects a combination of profit-taking after a sharp rally from the March lows and growing scrutiny around whether the current pace of AI-related capital spending can be sustained — and ultimately generate an adequate return — particularly as elevated memory prices increase the cost of the AI buildout.

    Despite these concerns, fundamentals within the technology sector remain solid. Earnings growth is expected to remain robust in 2026, and there are limited signs that companies are meaningfully slowing AI-related spending. In fact, estimates continue to point to substantial capital spending tied to AI infrastructure, while analysts expect technology and communication services to grow profits by 52% and 23% respectively in 2026. Against this backdrop, we remain overweight technology-heavy asset classes such as U.S. large-cap stocks and emerging-market equities. However, we recommend balancing this exposure with overweights to more economically sensitive areas, including U.S. mid-cap stocks. At the sector level, we continue to recommend an overweight to communication services, which has lagged year-to-date but offers exposure to several AI-related beneficiaries. We also favor industrials, which should benefit from continued infrastructure spending and an ongoing rebound in manufacturing activity.
     
  • Jobless claims remain contained, signaling steady labor-market conditions – Initial jobless claims for last week came in at 215,000, slightly below expectations of 220,000 and modestly lower than the prior reading of 217,000. So far in 2026, initial claims have averaged roughly 213,000, well below the 30-year median of more than 300,000. This suggests that layoffs remain contained, a view reinforced by the unemployment rate declining to 4.2% in last Friday’s June employment report. While 2025 was characterized by both low hiring and low firing — with nonfarm payroll growth averaging roughly 10,000 per month and initial jobless claims averaging 226,000 — labor-market conditions have improved this year. Job growth has strengthened, while both the unemployment rate and initial claims remain contained. Over the past three months, nonfarm payrolls have increased by an average of 111,000, compared with an average monthly gain of 92,000 year-to-date. Overall, we would characterize labor-market conditions as stable. Low unemployment and modest hiring growth should continue to help support economic activity over the remainder of the year.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet. 

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