Early Look
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Futures | Up/Down | % | Last |
Dow | 209.00 | 0.40% | 52,153 |
S&P 500 | 59.25 | 0.79% | 7,552 |
Nasdaq | 425.50 | 1.42% | 30,424 |
Just 12 hours after stock markets tumbled on rising interest rate hike expectations given the “hawkish” FOMC meeting on Wednesday, boosting Treasury yields across the board, U.S. futures are surging as Nasdaq futures +1.6% or 480 points to 30,480, erasing all of yesterday's declines and S&P futures are up near 1%. The signing of the interim US-Iran peace deal is overshadowing concerns about rising interest rates following yesterday's FOMC meeting commentary. The Fed's rate-setting stance skewed hawkish, the first meeting with new Chairman Kevin Warsh, pressuring US equities as the Dow fell 0.97%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.2% and the Nasdaq slid 1.3%. The 2-Year Treasury yield spiked 16.9 bps Wednesday to end the day at 4.21% as the bond market is now pricing in 2 rate hikes this year (at the start of the year it was pricing in 2 rate cuts). The yen falls to its lowest levels since 2024 against the US dollar, raising Japanese BoJ intervention, just a few days after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates to highest levels in decades.
However, stock futures jump as President Trump and his Iranian counterpart on Wednesday signed the memo outlining their countries' peace agreement, a move previously expected on Friday. The deal went into effect on Thursday, potentially speeding up the timeline for reopening the Strait of Hormuz to commercial traffic and lifting sanctions on Iranian oil. Negotiations on more protracted issues, including Tehran's nuclear program, are expected to take place over the next 60 days. Oil prices dropped over 2% on the news, with Brent crude futures sinking below $78 a barrel and West Texas Intermediate falling toward $74 a barrel.
U.S. stocks closed sharply lower Wednesday after the Federal Reserve delivered a more hawkish-than-expected policy message and new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reinforced the central bank's inflation-fighting stance. Treasury yields surged, the dollar rallied, and rate-cut hopes were pushed further into the future. In Asian markets, The Nikkei Index surged again to another all-time highs, rising 1,151 points or 1.65% to 71,053, the Shanghai Index fell -17 points to 4,090, the Hang Seng Index declined -387 points to 23,924, and the Kospi closed at an all-time high rising around 3%. In Europe, the German DAX is up 22 points to 24,957, while the FTSE 100 is down -105 points to 10,402. Today will be the last day of trading for Wall Street stock markets, which will close on Friday to observe the Juneteenth holiday.
@Bluekurtic noted on X, “On Kevin Warsh 's first FOMC day as Fed Chair, S&P 500 fell 1.2%, extending the streak to four negative first fed meeting days for new Chairs. It marks only the third 1%+ decline on a first fed meeting day, and the largest drop since Greenspan in 1987.”
Market Closing Prices Yesterday
Economic Calendar for Today
Earnings Calendar:
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Macro | Up/Down | Last |
Nymex | -1.22 | 75.57 |
Brent | -1.63 | 77.92 |
Gold | -96.10 | 4,285.30 |
EUR/USD | -0.0024 | 1.1477 |
JPY/USD | 0.12 | 160.77 |
10-Year Note | -0.03 | 4.46% |
World News
Sector News Breakdown
Consumer
Energy, industrials and Materials
Financials
Healthcare
Technology, Media & Telecom
Mid-Morning Look
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | 198.94 | 0.39% | 51,691 |
S&P 500 | 70.74 | 0.95% | 7,490 |
Nasdaq | 348.72 | 1.34% | 26,370 |
Russell 2000 | 30.98 | 1.06% | 2,948 |
Stock market strength remains astounding, with every dip continuing to be bought, erasing all of yesterday's declines as the signing of the interim US-Iran peace deal on Wednesday overshadows concerns about rising interest rates following yesterday's FOMC meeting commentary. Stock markets slumped on Wednesday, ending near the lows after the U.S. FOMC held the federal funds rate steady at 3.50%-3.75 as expected, but Summary of Economic Projections (SEP) skewed decidedly hawkish. The median FOMC interest rate forecast for 2026 was upwardly revised to 3.75% (from 3.375%), driven by 9 out of 18 members projecting further tightening ahead, including six who anticipate a 50-bps hike. However, futures jumped overnight and held gains this morning following news that Washington and Tehran have electronically signed an interim accord. The deal, which extends the active Middle East ceasefire by granting key financial concessions to Iran, allowed both countries to spin a domestic victory and provided a major geopolitical sigh of relief for risk assets. Oil prices are lower, while the dollar and short term yields rise.
While stock market strength remains broad based, there is no question that the daily surge in semiconductor stocks (SOX) is doing the bulk of leading in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq, with the PHLX Semi Index (SOX) trading at new all-time highs rising 5.4% around 14,200 as semis continue to lead the charge, up about 100% this year. At the same time, the brief rebound in software names last month is all but gone (IGV), down across the board today with the rotation into semis continuing. Even Mag 7 names have been lagging with MSFT, AMZN, META among names failing to rally with the Nasdaq. Energy stocks have been tumbling (XLE -7% this month) on the decline in oil prices.
The US dollar surges as EUR/USD hit a 2-1/2-month low of 1.1460 in early NY, it traded down -0.34, while the Japanese yen falls to lowest levels since 2024 vs the greenback, raising fears about potential BoJ intervention just days after the Bank of Japan raised interest rates. US/Iran sign agreement to end conflict and reopen Strait of Hormuz; deal entered into force following remote signing by Trump and Iranian leadership, with delegations set to meet in Switzerland on Friday for nuclear talks. June FOMC was clearly hawkish: 9 policymakers projected hikes in '26 & inflation forecasts were marked up significantly. New Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh leaned hawkish too, emphasizing restoration of price stability.
The Bank of England kept interest rates on hold at 3.75% in June, judging it would be premature to raise rates now given the unclear strength of increased inflation pressures. The Central bank's Monetary Policy Committee voted 7-2 to keep rates on hold, in line with economists' expectations in a Reuters poll, after external member Megan Greene joined Chief Economist Huw Pill in calling for a quarter-point rate rise. Also today, the Swiss National Bank left its Benchmark interest rate unchanged, saying its medium-term price outlook had barely changed despite a recent uptick in inflation stoked by higher fuel costs from the Iran war.
Wall Street is bracing for the largest options expiration event in history on Thursday, June 18, with approximately $8.3 trillion in U.S. options exposure set to roll off in a single session, 18% above the previous record of roughly $7.1 trillion set in December 2025. The event carries an unusual wrinkle: what would normally be a third-Friday triple witching has been shifted one day earlier because U.S. markets will be closed Friday, June 19, for the Juneteenth federal holiday.
Economic Data
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | -3.14 | 73.65 |
Brent | -2.68 | 76.91 |
Gold | -114.80 | 4,266.60 |
EUR/USD | -0.0028 | 1.1471 |
JPY/USD | 0.23 | 160.86 |
10-Year Note | -0.034 | 4.429% |
Sector Movers Today
Stock GAINERS
Stock LAGGARDS
Closing Recap
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | -506.51 | 0.97% | 51,493 |
S&P 500 | -91.23 | 1.21% | 7,420 |
Nasdaq | -354.69 | 1.34% | 26,021 |
Russell 2000 | -21.20 | 0.72% | 2,918 |
In a surprise “hawkish” shift for rate policy, U.S. stock markets pulled back off intraday highs as stock markets now fully price a 25bp Fed rate hike before year-end following the FOMC new rate projections. Markets took the news that 50% of FOMC members (9 of 18) penciling in one rate hike minimum for 2026 as Iran-war price shock crushes consumers as a hawkish surprise. The updated policy statement removed language that had been used to flag the likelihood of further reductions in borrowing costs this year. New projections show inflation slowing sharply next year, allowing rates to return to where they are now by the end of 2027 and easing modestly further in 2028. Treasury yields and the US dollar soared after the release of the policy statement and projections, weighing on sentiment, while precious metals reversed lower. The Dow Jones Industrial Average snapped its winning streak for the week, pulling back off all time highs.
Kevin Warsh's 1st press conference begins with 3 big messages: 1) Inflation: "This committee will deliver price stability" 2) No forward guidance. "We agreed [it] was not well suited for the current policy juncture." Dot Plot will continue, but Warsh won't participate; 3) Warsh launching 5 task forces to "propose next steps" for policymaker consideration, including on Fed communication. Warsh says the Fed has given markets "a new chapter for the central bank," and acknowledges "this is a lot of change for financial markets to digest." Says he won't be particularly intrigued by how markets react in the first minutes or days, but markets and the public "must know Fed will deliver on price stability." Adds the Fed needs to make sure price changes in oil, eggs, beef, and the like don't broaden across the economy.
Stock markets dipped notably after the rate projections were released at 2:00 pm et which showed greater chances of rate hikes this year, which sunk bonds (boosting yields), as well as sectors leveraged to rates such as Smallcaps and homebuilders, etc. As new Fed Chairman Warsh spoke, markets regained solid footing as the big dip in semis and AI names after the 2:00 announcement were bought aggressively, lifting broader markets despite a sharp decline in large cap tech today (META, MSFT, GOOGL, AMZN). Sharp declines in Consumer Staples (XLP), REITs (XLRE), Communications (XLC) and Healthcare (XLV). Lots of volatility as the first meeting with Warsh as chair had a little something for everyone.
In a quick synopsis of the Fed meeting/presser: They held rates at 3.50%-3.75%, but the real story was the shift in tone as their easing bias was removed, the 2026 dot plot moved higher, while core PCE inflation forecast raised to 3.3% and policymakers now see a hike as more likely than a cut…and still, markets were down only slightly just off record highs for major averages. Other items to watch this week include quad witching as a $5.15 trillion worth of options on the S&P 500 are set to expire on June 19th, the largest monthly expiration on record. This is led by the S&P 500 index options, which account for $4.84 trillion of the total. The remaining $307 billion consists of options on the S&P 500 ETF.
Economic Data
FOMC highlights
Commodities, Currencies & Treasuries
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | 0.74 | 76.79 |
Brent | 0.59 | 79.55 |
Gold | 27.00 | 4,381.40 |
EUR/USD | -0.0124 | 1.1484 |
JPY/USD | 0.31 | 160.74 |
10-Year Note | 0.036 | 4.462% |
Sector News Breakdown
Homebuilders, Building Products, Home Furnishing:
Leisure, Gaming & Lodging:
Energy, Materials and Industrials
Financials
Biotech & Pharma:
Healthcare Services & MedTech movers:
Aerospace & Defense
Technology
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Street Recommendations
Thursday, June 18, 2026
BARCLAYS
BENCHMARK
BOFA
CANACCORD
CANTOR FITZGERALD
CITI
DA DAVIDSON
DEUTSCHE BANK
DZ BANK
GOLDMAN SACHS
JEFFERIES
KEEFE BRUYETTE
KEYBANC
MIZUHO
MORGAN STANLEY
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STIFEL
UBS
WEDBUSH
WELLS FARGO
Rating abbreviations…
***OP = Outperform
***SP = Sector Perform
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***EW = Equal-weight
***UW = Underweight
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Monday June 22nd
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