Weekly Market Update
Week #24 β Market Update for June 8-12, 2026
Breadth came back, but the rally still depends on calm rates.
14 Jun 2026 Β· YK Research
Contents
Executive Summary
U.S. equities rose for the week, and leadership improved. SPY gained 0.6%, QQQ gained 2.3%, and IWM gained 4.0% from the June 5 close to the June 12 close. Equal weight also joined: RSP gained 1.8%. That matters because the market paid for more than one narrow AI trade.
Semiconductors were still the strongest part of the tape. SMH rose 8.8% and SOXX rose 10.5%. The market is still buying compute, memory, networking and AI infrastructure when rates stop hurting the trade.
Global equities were strong. ACWX gained 3.4%, Europe gained 2.9% via VGK, Japan gained 2.2% via EWJ, and emerging markets gained 5.1% via EEM. China lagged the group with MCHI up 0.7%. The better read is global beta recovery, not a clean China turn.
Crypto also caught a bid. Bitcoin rose 2.9% and ether rose 4.0% over the week. That fits the same message as equities: investors wanted exposure while rates were quiet.
Rates helped. The Treasury 10-year yield fell from 4.56% on June 8 to 4.48% on June 12. The 30-year yield fell from 5.03% to 4.97%. Credit was calm too: HYG rose 0.6% and LQD rose 0.8%.
The macro data were less clean. BLS data show May CPI up 0.47% month over month and 4.17% year over year on a seasonally adjusted CPI series. Core CPI was cooler at 0.21% month over month and 2.82% year over year. Michigan sentiment improved to 48.9 in June, but year-ahead inflation expectations were still 4.6%.
The setup is simple. Own the breadth improvement, but do not confuse it with a finished inflation problem. If yields stay calm, cyclicals and small caps can keep catching up. If the 10-year moves back above 4.6%, the rally probably narrows again.
US Stock Market
The useful signal was breadth. QQQ did better than SPY, but the Russell 2000 did better than both. Equal weight also beat cap weight. That is the market saying lower yields matter to the average stock again.
Earnings Were a Stock Picker's Warning
Index strength hid sharp single-name damage. Oracle fell 13.8% and Adobe fell 18.9% for the week. Nvidia was flat despite the semiconductor ETF surge. That split matters. The market rewarded the basket, but punished names where expectations were too high.
AI demand alone did not protect the stock from valuation and earnings risk.
Software remains vulnerable when growth does not clear the market's AI bar.
The leader paused while the broader semiconductor basket squeezed higher.
High-beta growth participated as yields eased.
Global Markets
The global tape was stronger than the U.S. headline. ACWX gained 3.4%, and emerging markets gained 5.1%. Europe and Japan also moved well. China was positive but weak relative to the rest of the world.
Global ex-U.S. equities participated.
Europe gained with lower global yields.
Japan rose, helped by a stable yen proxy.
China lagged the global rebound.
Emerging markets were a major winner.
Cryptocurrency Market
Bitcoin rose from about $61.7k to $63.5k, a 2.9% weekly gain. Ether rose from about $1.60k to $1.66k, a 4.0% gain. Crypto was not the main story, but it confirmed the same liquidity impulse seen in small caps and semis.
Read-Through
This was not a crypto-specific breakout. It looked more like beta responding to easier rates and stronger risk appetite. For positioning, I would treat crypto as confirmation, not leadership. The better signal came from IWM, RSP and semiconductors.
Economic Indicators, Statistics and News
United States
The inflation mix is awkward. BLS CPI data show headline CPI up 0.47% in May and 4.17% year over year on the seasonally adjusted index. Core CPI was milder at 0.21% month over month and 2.82% year over year. That gives both sides evidence. Bulls can point to core cooling. The Fed still has to care about headline pressure and inflation expectations.
The labor market is slower, but not broken. Payroll employment rose 172k in May. Unemployment was 4.3%. Average hourly earnings rose 0.32% month over month and 3.45% year over year. That is not recession data. It is late-cycle data with less room for valuation mistakes.
Consumer sentiment improved from 44.8 in May to 48.9 in preliminary June data. That is still weak. Year-ahead inflation expectations eased to 4.6% from 4.8%, while long-run expectations fell to 3.4% from 3.9%. Better, but still too high for a simple Fed-cut story.
Global
Global markets traded as if the dollar and rates were less hostile. The UUP dollar ETF slipped 0.25%, while euro and sterling ETF proxies rose. The Treasury curve eased. That combination helped ex-U.S. equities and emerging markets.
The key distinction: price action improved faster than the macro data. That can be profitable for a while. It can also reverse quickly if the next inflation print or Fed communication pushes yields up again.
Foreign Exchange Markets
The dollar softened a little.
Euro exposure rose against the dollar proxy.
The yen proxy was almost flat.
Sterling was firm.
FX did not fight equities. A slightly softer dollar helped global risk appetite, especially emerging markets. No big dollar break yet, but the week was friendlier for non-U.S. exposure.
Commodities and Energy Markets
Commodities were mixed. Gold fell, oil fell, copper rose. That is not a classic recession tape. It looks more like investors sold safety and energy while buying industrial beta.
Commodity Read
Copper up while oil and gold fell is an important split. It says the market wanted growth exposure, not crisis hedges. For portfolios, that supports selective cyclicals and industrial AI infrastructure. It does not support chasing energy just because equities are up.
Debt and Fixed Income Markets
Rates were the quiet hero. The 2-year yield fell from 4.15% to 4.09%. The 10-year fell from 4.56% to 4.48%. The 30-year fell from 5.03% to 4.97%. Bonds did not rip, but yields stopped rising. That was enough.
Front-end yields eased.
The key equity valuation input improved.
Long-end pressure eased too.
Duration stabilized.
Credit did not show stress.
What to Watch Next Week
- The 10-year yield. Above 4.6%, the breadth trade becomes harder. Below 4.4%, small caps and cyclicals get another window.
- Semiconductor follow-through. SOXX rose more than 10% in one week. That is powerful, but it raises entry risk.
- Whether RSP and IWM keep beating SPY. That is the cleanest breadth check.
- Fed language around inflation expectations. Michigan improved, but 4.6% one-year inflation expectations are still high.
- Single-name earnings reactions. Oracle and Adobe show that a broad rally can still punish crowded expectations.