Tuesday 7/7/2026 p.m.

  • Stocks edge lower amid tech weakness and renewed geopolitical tension – U.S. equity markets traded lower on Tuesday, as weakness in technology shares weighed on the broader indices. Semiconductors were a notable laggard within technology, with the PHLX Semiconductor Index falling more than 4% on the day. The decline followed preliminary second-quarter results from Samsung Electronics, which reported a record quarter; however, the strong results were overshadowed by concerns about whether the robust pace of spending on components needed to build out AI infrastructure can continue at the same rate. Outside of technology, defensive sectors such as health care, consumer staples, and utilities fared better, with each gaining more than 0.9%. The energy sector also outperformed, benefiting from a near 5% rise in oil prices as geopolitical tensions between the U.S. and Iran resurfaced following a military flare-up in the Strait of Hormuz. Higher oil prices also flowed through to Treasury yields, with the 10-year yield climbing to 4.55% on the day and the 2-year yield rising to 4.18%.
     
  • Second-quarter earnings season on the horizon – After a strong first half of 2026, investor attention will shift to second-quarter earnings season, which begins next week with several large U.S. financial institutions scheduled to report results. Expectations are for the robust profit growth seen in the first quarter to continue, with consensus estimates calling for S&P 500 earnings growth of nearly 22% year-over-year in the second quarter. At the sector level, information technology and energy are expected to drive much of the growth. Technology-sector earnings are projected to increase by more than 60%, supported by continued investment in AI infrastructure and related technologies. Meanwhile, energy-sector profits are expected to more than double from a year ago, benefiting from higher oil prices during the second quarter. For the full year, S&P 500 earnings are forecast to grow 24% year-over-year. If realized, this would mark the strongest annual profit growth since 2014, excluding the post-pandemic recovery period. We continue to believe the economic backdrop remains supportive for equities, underpinned by stable labor-market conditions and improving manufacturing activity. These factors should support healthy earnings growth in the quarters ahead and provide a favorable environment for equity markets, in our view.
     
  • Midyear performance check-in – Global equity markets have started 2026 on a strong footing, with the S&P 500 gaining nearly 11%, including dividends, through yesterday's close. These healthy year-to-date returns have come despite an oil price shock and heightened geopolitical uncertainty during the second quarter, as strong corporate earnings growth and resilient economic activity have continued to support investor sentiment. Gains have also been broad-based beyond U.S. large-cap stocks. U.S. mid- and small-cap equities have outperformed, with the Russell Midcap Index up more than 15% and the Russell 2000 rising over 20% through yesterday's close. International markets have also delivered solid returns, with developed-market equities advancing more than 11% and emerging-market stocks rallying 24%, with performance in emerging markets supported by technology-heavy regions such as Taiwan and South Korea, which have benefited from robust AI-related spending trends. Given resilient economic activity and strong corporate earnings growth, we believe the backdrop for equities remains favorable. In our opportunistic asset allocation guidance, we recommend investors maintain an overweight allocation to equities relative to bonds, with a preference for U.S. large- and mid-cap stocks as well as emerging-market equities.

Brock Weimer, CFA;
Investment Strategy

Source for all data: FactSet. 

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