Friday, 5/29/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks add to gains on Middle East ceasefire optimism - Ongoing reports that the U.S. and Iran have reached an agreement to extend their ceasefire by 60 days continue to support investor sentiment. Major equity indexes were slightly higher on Friday and posted their ninth consecutive weekly gain. Oil prices were down about 1.5% today and almost 10% lower for the week, trading near $88 per barrel amid hopes that the Strait of Hormuz will reopen. AI-driven demand continues to support earnings, as illustrated by a 30% jump in shares of Dell Technologies. The company delivered a sales outlook well above consensus estimates, driven by strong demand for AI-related server infrastructure. Tech was a major driver behind the S&P 500's May strength rising 16%. Nonetheless, both the equal-weight S&P 500 and small-cap indexes reached new highs this month, suggesting early signs of broadening market leadership as bond yields retreat.
     
  • S&P 500 posts a ninth consecutive week of gains - Despite persistent geopolitical headline noise, U.S. equities have continued to move higher, with the S&P 500 logging 22 record highs so far this year. The rally has been largely tech-led and supported by resilient earnings, but the key question is whether it can be sustained. A nine-week winning streak is a rare occurrence historically. Over the past 70 years, this has only happened 12 other times. Notably, these streaks have tended to occur earlier in the bull market cycle, rather than at its end. Forward returns following similar periods have generally been positive. Three- and six-month and one-year returns were positive in most instances *. The key takeaway, in our view, is that while the market may pause in the near term to consolidate gains, this type of strength has not historically signaled that a peak is imminent.
     
  • Inflation is a key risk for the Fed as labor market concerns ease - This week, several Fed officials expressed concern about the recent uptick in inflation, which has pressured bond returns. The recent pullback in oil prices is helping to ease some of those worries, with the 10-year Treasury yield falling below 4.5%. However, with inflation moving further away from the Fed’s 2% target and labor market trends stabilizing or even improving, policymakers may begin to shift away from their easing bias at the June meeting. Looking ahead, next week’s focus will be on the monthly jobs report, which is expected to show a solid pace of job gains of around 100,000, alongside a steady unemployment rate of 4.3%. We expect the Fed to remain vigilant but are unlikely to overreact to what may prove to be a temporary, energy-driven inflation spike. In our base case scenario, we expect the Fed to remain on hold this year and resume rate cuts next year.

Angelo Kourkafas, CFA;
Investment Strategy

*Bloomberg, Edward Jones; Source for all data not cited: Bloomberg, FactSet. 

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