Wednesday, 6/10/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks waver with geopolitical tensions back in focus – Equity markets closed lower on Wednesday as a flare-up in geopolitical tensions weighed on investor sentiment. The U.S. launched strikes against Iran overnight in retaliation for Iran’s downing of a U.S. helicopter, adding uncertainty to an already fragile geopolitical backdrop. Sentiment was further pressured after President Trump suggested Wednesday morning that negotiations have been taking too long. The S&P 500 finished lower by 1.6%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq declined by 2%. Despite the geopolitical escalation, oil prices closed only modestly higher, with WTI crude finishing just above $90 per barrel. On the economic front, May CPI inflation was in line with expectations, with headline CPI rising 4.2% year-over-year and core CPI increasing 2.9% annually. Bond yields closed slightly higher, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield closing near 4.55% and the 2-year yield around 4.13%.
     
  • May inflation data gives the Fed room to remain patient – Headline CPI for May was in line with expectations, rising 0.5% month-over-month and 4.2% year-over-year, marking the strongest annual increase since April 2023. A key driver of the headline increase was a 3.9% monthly rise in energy prices. However, inflation trends looked more encouraging beneath the surface. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.2% in May and 2.9% from a year ago, with the monthly gain coming in below expectations for a 0.3% increase. Additionally, core goods prices posted their first monthly decline since May 2025, while services inflation remained contained, rising 0.3% on the month. From a Fed policy perspective, we expect policymakers to acknowledge that upside risks to inflation have increased in recent months, and they are likely to remove the easing bias from their policy statement at next Wednesday's meeting. However, we believe the bar for a Fed rate hike remains high in the near term, particularly given signs that inflation has not yet broadened meaningfully beyond energy.
     
  • Central bank watch – Global monetary policy is in focus this week with the Bank of Canada leaving its policy rate unchanged this morning, while the European Central Bank meets tomorrow and is expected to deliver a 0.25% rate hike, taking the deposit rate to 2.25%. Next week brings decisions from the Bank of Japan, Bank of England and Federal Reserve. The Fed and BoE are expected to stay on hold, while the BoJ is expected to raise its policy rate by 0.25% to 1% — which, if delivered, would mark its highest level since 1995 — as Japan continues to show signs of emerging from decades of sluggish growth and deflation. For the Fed, next week’s meeting will be Kevin Warsh’s first as chair and will include an updated set of economic projections. We are aligned with markets in expecting the Fed to remain on hold next week, and we believe policymakers are likely to stay on hold in the near term. While risks of a hike have risen amid ongoing uncertainty in the Middle East and inflation that has been above target since 2021, we think the Fed will be willing to look through an oil-price-driven spike in inflation.

    Looking at the bigger picture, while the global monetary policy backdrop is likely set to tighten at the margin, we expect any renewed rate-hiking cycles to be relatively short-lived — particularly if geopolitical tensions in Iran ease and global oil flows normalize. The global economy also appears to be entering this period on solid footing. In the U.S., job growth has reaccelerated in recent months, while signs of broad-based layoffs remain limited and the unemployment rate stands at 4.3%. Overseas, the eurozone unemployment rate remains near historic lows, and manufacturing activity in Japan has been resilient in recent months. Against this backdrop, we continue to believe opportunities remain attractive across global equity markets.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet. 

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