Stock Market Update
Updated: 18-Jun-26
| 06:17 ET | Market is Closed |
| [BRIEFING.COM] S&P futures vs fair value: +70.00. Nasdaq futures vs fair value: +498.00. | |
| 06:17 ET | Market is Closed |
| [BRIEFING.COM] Nikkei...71053.49...+1151.20...+1.70%. Hang Seng...23924.82...-387.40...-1.60%. | |
| 06:17 ET | Market is Closed |
| [BRIEFING.COM] FTSE...10415.07...-93.50...-0.90%. DAX...24969...+160.40...+0.70%. | |
| 16:25 ET | Dow -507.12 at 51492.55, Nasdaq -354.69 at 26042.64, S&P -91.25 at 7420.1 |
[BRIEFING.COM] After spending the first half of the session drifting sideways, stocks turned lower following the June FOMC meeting, which left the federal funds target range unchanged but was interpreted as a more hawkish-than-expected shift in tone during Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's first meeting at the helm. Weakness was broad, and the S&P 500 (-1.2%), Nasdaq Composite (-1.3%), and DJIA (-1.0%) finished firmly lower, despite the DJIA notching a record intraday high earlier in the session. The policy statement itself was notably stripped down, with the Committee voting 12-0 to hold the federal funds target range at 3.50%-3.75% and closing with an unambiguous commitment that it "will deliver price stability." The lack of forward guidance, combined with the removal of several longer-standing pieces of language, reinforced the impression of a procedural reset under Fed Chair Warsh. That tone shift was further amplified in the updated Summary of Economic Projections, which showed inflation running persistently above target and pushed out expectations for policy easing. The median path now implies no rate cuts in 2026, alongside a meaningful upward revision to both headline and core PCE inflation forecasts. Taken together, the statement and projections were read as signaling a higher-for-longer policy stance, prompting a repricing in rates and contributing to the broader risk-off move in equities. The afternoon sell-off left all eleven S&P 500 sectors in negative territory, though the session's earlier trends were still visible at the sector level. The industrials (-0.1%) and financials (-0.5%) sectors closed with the narrowest losses after their earlier gains pushed the DJIA to a new all-time high. Several major banking components of the Dow, including Goldman Sachs (GS 1099.14, +8.47, +0.78%) and JPMorgan Chase (JPM 333.46, +2.32, +0.70%), escaped with gains, while Robinhood Markets (HOOD 105.20, +8.49, +8.78%) was one of the top-performing S&P 500 names after announcing it would eliminate 10% of its workforce against a backdrop of positive analyst commentary. Electrical product names such as GE Vernova (GEV 1048.86, +66.51, +6.77%) and Vertiv (VRT 317.58, +17.98, +6.00%) contributed to the relative outperformance of the industrials sector, while semiconductor stocks also rebounded from yesterday's weakness. While the afternoon selling pressure eroded the gain of the PHLX Semiconductor Index (+1.4%), it still finished firmly higher as investors bought into yesterday's weakness across semiconductor names. That helped limit losses in the top-weighted information technology sector (-0.6%), which was weighted down by another weaker showing from the Magnificent Seven cohort today. Microsoft (MSFT 378.91, -14.92, -3.79%) was a laggard in the technology sector, while Meta Platforms (META 567.58, -32.63, -5.44%) weighed on the communication services sector (-3.0%), and Amazon (AMZN 237.50, -8.50, -3.46%) contributed to weakness in the consumer discretionary sector (-2.7%). All seven Magnificent Seven stocks finished lower, and the Vanguard Mega Cap Growth ETF finished 1.4% lower. In other mega-cap news, SpaceX (SPCX 192.21, -9.59, -4.75%) finished lower for the first time after three consecutive sessions of sharp gains going back to its debut on Friday. Elsewhere in the consumer discretionary sector, rate-sensitive names such as Carvana (CVNA 62.84, -7.20, -10.28%) and an assortment of homebuilder stocks lagged. The real estate sector (-2.5%), which is also viewed as rate sensitive, underperformed as well. Outside the S&P 500, the Russell 2000 (-0.7%) was a relative outperformer, while the S&P Mid Cap 400 (-1.2%) finished with a loss similar to those across the major averages. Ultimately, the afternoon sell-off overshadowed what had been another constructive session for cyclical sectors, which benefited earlier in the day from stable oil prices as the market remains confident the proposed peace deal between the U.S. and Iran will be signed on Friday, even with President Trump levying threatening renewed military action if a deal is not struck. Instead, investors focused on the prospect of a higher-for-longer policy environment, with a more hawkish outlook and a lack of forward guidance diminishing the market's odds for a rate cut in 2026. U.S. Treasuries had a mixed outing on Wednesday after sideways morning trade gave way to some post-FOMC volatility that produced losses in 10s and shorter tenors while the long bond outperformed. The 2-year note yield settled up 11 basis points to 4.16%, and the 10-year note yield settled up four basis points to 4.46%.
Reviewing today's data:
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