Closing Recap
Friday, July 17, 2026
Index | Up/Down | % | Last |
DJ Industrials | -406.58 | 0.77% | 52,146 |
S&P 500 | -76.10 | 1.01% | 7,457 |
Nasdaq | -361.70 | 1.40% | 25,520 |
Russell 2000 | -12.35 | 0.42% | 2,962 |
U.S. stocks finished lower led by technology/semiconductors again, but most of the damage was done in the overnight session when Nasdaq futures tumbled as much as -2.5% before rebounding and paring losses. Still, the Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) was down -4.15% on the week, the Tech sector (XLK) was down -5.5%, and the semiconductor index (SOX) was down -9.97% for the week (and now down -18% for the month) as investors have pulled back on the reigns in the AI/data center/semi/power space this month. Winners on the week were Energy (XLE +4.7%), REITs (XLRE +2.2%), and Consumer Staples (XLP +1.27%). Semis and Memory stocks have fallen to multi-week lows below their 50-day MAs as capital has been shifting toward strength in Financial (XLF), Retail (XRT), and Healthcare (XLV). While the SPX consolidates within 1% of record highs, softening A/D lines and waning breadth and trend indicators have weighed on sentiment. Attention turns to corporate earnings with a busy week on deck that includes GOOGL, TSLA, INTC, MMM, TXN, AXP, IBM, NOW and VZ. Although economic data releases might take a back seat, the ECB meeting anchors the weekly central bank agenda alongside several emerging market decisions with no chance expected. For the week, S&P 500 ends down -1.55%, Nasdaq down -2.9%, Dow down -0.93%.
Renewed pressure in semis (SOX) came this week as investors questioned whether elevated AI-related valuations remain justified. Competition fears rose overnight, driven by Chinese startup Moonshot’s Kimi K3 Ai model rivaling OpenAI and Anthropic. Investors fear the breakthrough echoes of the DeepSeek shock, questioning the justification for massive Ai capital spending. A disappointing market reaction to TSM's results the day prior and higher capex guidance fueled concerns over the eventual returns on the sector's heavy investment cycle. Weakness was particularly acute across Asia, where Taiwan, Japan and Hong Kong all posted sizeable declines given their heavy exposure to chipmakers/AI supply chains.
In his highly awaited national address, President Trump focused mainly on US election security. Trump repeated claims that the 2020 election was stolen and cast doubt on the security of the upcoming midterms. He used the speech to press Congress to pass a strict voter identification bill, saying it is imperative that Americans feel elections are free of misconduct and interference. He said he was detailing findings from newly declassified intelligence reports, alleging vulnerabilities in voting systems and noncitizens on state voter rolls. In geopolitical news, for the sixth consecutive night, the US launched a wave of strikes on Qeshm Island, Bandar Abbas, Bushehr, and other areas across Iran. Iran responded with multiple waves against Kuwait, Iraq and Bahrain targeting US assets. Oil prices rose again this morning and are higher on the week.
Economic Data
- June import prices rose +0.3%, above the consensus decline of (-0.7%) but below the May +1.7%, while June export prices fell (-0.6%) vs. consensus (-0.4%) and down from the May +1.2% (prev +1.3%). June non-petroleum import prices +0.5%,year-over-year +4.4%.
- June Industrial output rose a modest +0.1% vs. consensus +0.2% and in-line with May +0.1%; June mining output +0.4% (May +1.1%), Utilities output +0.4% (May -0.7%); June capacity use rate 76.1% vs. consensus 76.2% and vs May 76.1% (previous 76.2%).
- U.S. housing starts jumped +19.0% m/m to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.427M in June from 1.199M (revised from 1.177M) in May, well above the 1.320M consensus. The rate of housing starts in June increased 3.5% y/y. May building permits issued for privately owned housing slipped -3.0% m/m to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.367M vs. 1.400M consensus and 1.410M prior.
- University of Michigan surveys of consumers sentiment prelim July 54.4 (consensus 51.0) vs final June 49.5 as current conditions index prelim July 54.9 (consensus 48.7) vs final June 47.7 and expectations index prelim July 54.0 (consensus 51.7) vs final June 50.7.
- University of Michigan surveys of consumers 1-year inflation outlook prelim July 4.2% vs final June 4.6% while 5-year inflation outlook prelim July 3.3% vs final June 3.3%.
Commodities
- August gold prices rose +$26.70, or +0.67%, to settle at $4,018.80 an ounce, but still posted its biggest weekly loss in six as escalating U.S.-Iran tensions drove energy prices higher, fueling inflation fears and reinforcing expectations of U.S. interest rate hikes. Prices were down over -2% for the week. The U.S. dollar rose for a second straight session, making bullion more expensive for overseas buyers. Gold has fallen about 25% since the U.S.-backed war with Iran began in late February, pressured by expectations that war-driven inflation could keep interest rates higher for longer. September Silver edges higher +$0.14, or +0.25%, to settle at $56.33 an ounce.
- U.S. WTI crude oil futures settle at $82.49/bbl, up $3.54, or 4.48% in what was a big week for oil prices, while Brent crude oil prices jumped $3.87 or 4.59% to settle at $88.10 per barrel. Both were at their highest since mid-June. For the week, both jumped over 16% as Iran/US headlines continued to dominate with attacks on regions of Iran pushing up oil prices and causing some angst for stocks.
Currencies & Treasuries
- U.S. Treasury yields were lower following another round of stronger economic data and posted a weekly decline as markets have largely priced out any chance of a rate hike from the Federal Reserve at its policy meeting later this month. Import prices came in above expectations with a surplus vs expected decline while housing data came in strong as well. Expectations for a rate hike of at least 25 bps from the Fed tumbled earlier this week after cooler CPI and PPI inflation readings.
- The yield on the benchmark U.S. 10-year Treasury note fell -2.6 basis points to 4.523%. The yield was down nearly 3 bps on the week, its first weekly drop after climbing for two straight weeks. The two-year Treasury yield, which typically moves in step with interest rate expectations for the Fed, rose on the day, but fell -3.6 basis points to 4.172%.
Macro | Up/Down | Last |
WTI Crude | 3.54 | 82.49 |
Brent | 3.87 | 88.10 |
Gold | 26.70 | 4,018.80 |
EUR/USD | -0.0004 | 1.1437 |
JPY/USD | 0.05 | 162.45 |
10-Year Note | -0.026 | 4.542% |
Sector News Breakdown
Retail, Consumer Staples & Restaurants:
- Restaurant sector: YUM shares fell after investigators identified shredded iceberg lettuce supplied by Taylor Farms to Taco Bell as a potential source of a multistate Cyclospora outbreak that has sickened thousands (DRI, MCD, QSR, WEN were also under pressure in casual dining). In earnings previews, Benchmark raised its tgt on BJRI to $68 from $50 and raised Q2 comp sales assumptions based on the traffic strength that have seen broadly across the full-service dining industry during Q22; BJRI was also upgraded to Outperform at William Blair. RBC Capital previews some quarters saying they continue to lean constructive on WING despite top-line pressures and constructive on shares of CMG heading into the print where RBC anticipate a SSS growth beat and raise.
- Tobacco sector (MO, PM): Goldman Sachs said they are incrementally more constructive on the US tobacco and nicotine category in the near term, as moderating cigarette volume declines and strong nicotine pouch growth support a better 2Q setup, despite persistent inflationary pressure and higher gas prices for consumers. Favor Buy-rated PM and MO as their strong smoke-free positioning and retail momentum support our expectation for a Q2 beat-and-raise.
- Consumer staples/food/beverage: KO shares led decliners in beverages/food as consumer staples (XLP) fell around -1% after leading mkts yesterday up around 2.7%. Note today shares of CLX, CPB, GIS, PEP, MKC were all down notably in reversal of prior day trade. Last night KO said that Fairlife, LLC, a dairy company which it owns, temporarily suspended production operations in the United States after unauthorized access by a third party to Parts of its systems.
- Retail sector: WMT is shuffling the leadership atop its massive U.S. business as the retailer's new chief executive continues to build his team. Kieran Shanahan, chief operating officer for Walmart U.S., will leave the role this week, the company said in an internal memo viewed by The Wall Street Journal. Shanahan, 45 years old, will be succeeded by Kyle Kinnard, currently COO for Walmart International
Energy
- Oil sector: shares of energy companies rise (APA, EOG, CVX, COP, FANG, XOM) tracked an incline in oil prices after the U.S. and Iran stepped up attacks across the Gulf, with shipping threatened by a potential Red Sea closure on top of the restricted traffic through the Strait of Hormuz. COP said it had agreed to acquire a 42% stake in BP Energy Company of Kirkuk Limited from BP, supporting the redevelopment of four producing oilfields in northern Iraq's Kirkuk area. The agreement is expected to be signed during Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Zaidi's official visit to Washington.
- MLPs/Pipelines: OKE was downgraded from Buy to Hold at Jefferies as its confidence in a meaningful Bakken growth acceleration has faded despite the recent oil rally. More than 5 months into the Iran-related volatility, producers continue to emphasize capital discipline, flat oil production, and returns overgrowth. Absent confidence in sustained higher oil prices, see limited upside to growth.
Banks, Brokers, Asset Managers:
- In Banks: RF reported Q2 adjusted EPS of $0.68, beating estimates of $0.63, on adjusted revenue of $1.95B, with net interest income of $1.277B and net interest margin of 3.66%; the company raised its dividend 13% and guided full-year 2026 net interest income growth of 2.5% to 4.5%. FITB posted Q2 net income of $763M, or $0.83 per share, on net interest income of $2.215B, with management guiding Q3 average loans and leases up 1%. TFC guided full-year 2026 TE revenue growth of 3.5% to 4%, net interest income up 1% to 1.5% versus 2025, noninterest expense up approximately 1.75%, and share repurchases of approximately $5B, with the company reaffirming it remains on track to achieve its ROTCE targets after higher Q2 profit
- FinTech: FIS said it's testing Anthropic's Mythos 5 AI model, using it to scan and evaluate its own systems through Project Glasswing. The advanced AI model is working as an additional layer within FIS's security system, it said. The initiative is separate from FIS's commercial AI partnership with Anthropic.
- In Insurance: TRV reported Q2 core profit jumps on lower catastrophe losses and strong investment income while quarterly core income per share rises 44% to $10.04; Q2 catastrophe losses were $518M on a pre-tax basis, compared with $927M y/y and net investment income rose 13.6% y/y to $1.07B; Q2 net written premiums $11.53B vs. $11.54B last year
- Mortgage REIT sector: JP Morgan previewed the quarter as they upgraded ABR to Neutral while downgraded AGNC to Neutral and KREF to underweight. NLY and RWT remain JPMC's Preferred names: NLY offers an attractive, well-supported yield with the optionality to reallocate capital across MSR and residential credit, while RWT's structural share gains in jumbo and its accelerating legacy winddown provide a Self-help path to EAD growth that is less dependent on the rate backdrop.
Biotech & Pharma:
- GSK said it decided to halt the development of an experimental drug as a treatment for chronic cough after the medicine missed the key goal in a late-stage clinical study; said the drug, camlipixant, its primary endpoint in a 12-week trial but fell short in a 24-week study.
- Medical Devices: ISRG shares fell as Q2 revenue of $2.89B was up 18% Y/y ex-fx, topping ests $2.82B, including as systems up 19%, I&A up 18% and service up 21% on better margins but procedure growth decelerated ~200bps q/q amid headwinds from ACA subsidy cuts and only reiterated 2026 da Vinci procedure growth guidance of 13.5%-15.5%, below consensus's 14.9%
- Medical Equipment: STAA shares tumbled after guides Q2 prelim revs $90M vs. est. $90.25M saying growth was driven by China, broader Asia-Pacific, and double-digit gains in the Americas while EMEA sales declined due to Middle East turmoil; company warns of ongoing macroeconomic headwinds.
- Medical Research: PSNL added to prior day gains following a report (by Street insider) indicating that the company is exploring a potential sale after receiving takeover interest from MRK and two other bidders. Merck already owns more than 10% of the company and is a key customer https://tinyurl.com/42c5a3wj
Industrials & Materials
- Industrial sector: JP Morgan upgraded EMR from Neutral to Overweight as expects the 2H26 to be supported by the phasing of large, long-cycle projects already in the backlog (up 9% Y/y), continued positive momentum in the growth Verticals (power, LNG, semi, A&D, etc.), coupled with upside from ME rehabilitation work not included in guidance. The firm also upgraded MMM to Overweight as sees growth taking hold at 3M, which is required to drive the next leg of EPS growth, with short Cycle indicators continuing to be supportive and Ai/datacenter driven demand broadening out into Parts of the economy outside of the obvious beneficiaries.
- Aerospace sector: ASTS was upgraded to Buy from Neutral at B Riley with an unchanged price target of $85 noting shares have declined 44% in the six months since the firm downgraded the stock, who believes this pullback tilts the risk/reward calculus favorably for the company. SPCX shares fell further below its IPO pricing of $135 after Starship rocket triggered a last-second abort before liftoff for its 13th flight test from Texas on Thursday as some of its 33 engines failed to start. CEO Elon Musk says SPCX will likely try to launch again early next week. SpaceX says they are now targeting Monday, July 20th at 6:45 PM ET for their 13th Starship test flight. Also, the WSJ reported SPCX is in talks with the Defense Department about providing the agency with access to data-center capacity worth billions of dollars for running artificial-intelligence models.
Materials, Metals & Mining
- Chemical sector: ECL was upgraded from Perform to Outperform at Oppenheimer saying Ecolab's core business performing well across the vast majority of its portfolio, the company's four "growth engines" are ramping strongly delivering accretive margin contribution and entry point is attractive from financial momentum, historical, and risk/reward perspectives. PPG was upgraded to Buy at Bank America ($127 tgt), encouraged by the organic sales growth at PPG over the last few quarters.
- Industrial Metals sector: aluminum producer AA reported Q2 adj EPS $2.12 vs est $2.19, adj EBITDA $901Mm vs est $943Mm on revs $3.97B vs est $3.939B; lowers 2026 alumina production projection to 9.5-9.6M metric tons, lowers 2026 alumina shipments projection to 11.5-11.6M metric tons. Precious metal miners still under pressure despite bounce in gold and silver prices.
AI, Semis, Internet
- PHLX semi index (SOX) was weak in what has been a brutal July and unwind of the AI trade. Overnight more bad news for semis/AI after Chinese startup Moonshot Ai unveils Kimi model it says rivals OpenAI, Anthropic. Moonshot Ai released a new model that it says closes the Gap with leading U.S. systems as Kimi K3 still trails Anthropic’s Claude Fable 5 and OpenAI’s GPT 5.6 SOL on overall performance, the company said but consistently outperformed other tested models. The release comes as the race for Ai supremacy between the U.S. and China intensifies.
- Neoclouds/Data centers: NBIS closed its first senior secured debt facility for about $775M to expand its AI cloud platform. The facility is backed by deployed GPU infrastructure and contracted cash flows from an investment-grade customer, matures in 2030, and is priced at SOFR + 2.50%. For the second time, New Mexico regulators have rejected applications for a natural gas pipeline across state lands that would supply power systems at a planned ORCL data center project, Bloomberg News reported. Data centers fell midday (CIFR, CLSK, HUT, WULF) after the NY Times reported META is in early discussions to lease computing power from its AI data centers to Anthropic in an agreement that could be worth as much as $10B over two years.
- Shares of U.S. semiconductor-related companies bounced off the lows, but overall, the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor index (SOX) was down more than 20% from its all-time closing high before paring losses 9and actually tuning positive this afternoon). Chipmakers globally are under pressure as investors assess the durability of the artificial intelligence-driven rally. Chinese AI startup Moonshot unveils world's largest open AI model, closing in on U.S. rivals. Big moves in MU, SNDK, SKHY, WDC, memory names as well as AI plays NVDA, INTC, ARM, AMD, AVGO.
Hardware & Software movers:
- Hardware sector: AAPL was upgraded from Hold to Buy at HSBC and raised tgt to $366 as thinks Apple is now at an operational turning point: not only can the company stay away from the (too) high CAPEX debate (it only invests 2.5% of its 2026e sales vs 39% for hyperscalers), it thinks it is also well placed to leverage its 2.5B installed device base with its forthcoming revamped Apple Intelligence.
- EDA sector: shares of CDNS, SNPS tumbled following Moonshot AI’s Kimi K3 news that it designed a chip to serve a nano model built on its own architecture. In a single 48-hour autonomous run, K3 built, optimized, and verified the chip using open-source EDA tools on the Nangate 45nm library. BNP Paribas defended shares of both saying Ai driving EDA use, not displacing it BNP believes that the market is digesting the wrong message: Ai is not displacing incumbent chip Design software players but moving up the stack and automating manual chip Design workflows.
- Media & Communication sector: NFLX shares stumbled after reporting quarterly results that were in-line but gave Q3 guidance that fell short of consensus for earnings and revenue (guides Q3 revs $12.86B vs est $13B and EPS $0.82 vs est $0.84) while tightened its 2026 rev view to +12% FXN (+13-14% reported). In other news, President Trump threatened to revoke the broadcast licenses of DIS owned ABC and CMCSA-owned NBC, accusing both networks of spreading misinformation and failing to air his remarks in prime time last night. META is in talks to hire a senior AMZN cloud computing executive as the social media giant expands its data center and cloud infrastructure ambitions, the WSJ reported.