Weekly Market Update
Week #28 β Market Update for July 6-10, 2026
AI leadership returned, but rates and inflation risk moved against it.
12 Jul 2026 Β· YK Research
Contents
Executive Summary
U.S. equities finished higher after a volatile week. The Dow reached a record and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq rallied as chip shares recovered. Broadcom and the AI complex did the heavy lifting. Investors looked through renewed U.S.-Iran tension and turned toward earnings season.
This was a return to growth leadership, not a clean improvement in the macro setup. Treasury yields rose across the curve. The 10-year moved from 4.48% on Monday to 4.56% on Friday. The 30-year reached 5.06%. Higher long rates raise the earnings bar for the same technology shares that led the rebound.
The Fed gave investors no easy relief. Minutes from the June meeting showed a wider policy split and stronger inflation concern. Some officials were open to higher rates. Tariffs, energy disruption and AI-related demand are keeping price pressure alive.
The real economy still looks firm. June ISM services registered 54.0, safely above the 50 line that separates expansion from contraction. Initial jobless claims slipped to 215,000. Demand is slowing at the edges, but there is no labor-market break that forces the Fed to ease.
Global signals were weaker. European shares struggled with technology valuation concerns and Middle East risk. China reported softer consumer inflation but faster producer-price growth. The IMF cut its 2026 world growth forecast to 3.0%. The U.S. equity tape is outrunning the global macro story.
Crypto confirmed that liquidity appetite survived. Bitcoin gained 2.4% from the July 3 observation to July 10. Ether rose 2.2%. The move was useful confirmation for growth exposure, though far less forceful than the equity chip rally.
Oil fell on Friday as hopes improved for smoother shipping through the Strait of Hormuz. Gold weakened as geopolitical inflation raised the chance of tighter policy. That mix matters: war risk is hitting expected inflation more than it is creating a broad flight to safety.
The positioning message is simple. Own AI leaders with earnings support, but do not treat the rebound as a free macro trade. If CPI runs hot and the 10-year clears 4.6%, multiple compression can erase good earnings quickly.
US Stock Market
The week repaired the damage in technology leadership. Chip shares surged, Broadcom rallied, and the Nasdaq closed sharply higher on Friday. The Dow also set a record. That combination says the bid was wider than one semiconductor stock, but AI optimism remained the main engine.
The market paid for visible growth while ignoring a hostile rates move. That can persist when earnings revisions rise faster than discount rates. It fails when revenue guidance merely meets expectations. The next two weeks will show which side wins.
Leadership Read
The group recovered as investors returned to the strongest earnings theme.
Industrial and old-economy exposure kept the advance from becoming purely narrow.
The discount-rate backdrop deteriorated through the week.
Banks open the main reporting window next week.
Global Markets
The U.S. led because it owns the deepest listed AI exposure. European shares were softer as technology valuation concerns and Middle East risk weighed on the region. India ended a weekly winning run despite a Friday lift from TCS. Japan remained caught between a weak yen, high government-debt sensitivity and debate over Bank of Japan independence.
The split is important. Global investors bought the U.S. earnings theme even as the IMF lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.0%. Price action says AI capital spending can stay strong despite softer world growth. That is plausible, but it concentrates portfolio risk in one spending cycle.
Cryptocurrency Market
Bitcoin rose 2.4%, from about $62.5k on July 3 to $64.1k on July 10. Ether gained 2.2%, from roughly $1,756 to $1,794. Both held up despite higher Treasury yields.
Read-Through
Crypto agreed with the equity message: investors still wanted liquidity-sensitive exposure. The modest size of the move argues against calling this a broad speculative surge. It was confirmation, not leadership.
Economic Indicators, Statistics and News
United States
ISM services registered 54.0 in June. Services activity is expanding, which reduces recession risk but also gives the Fed less reason to cut. Initial claims edged down to 215,000. Low layoffs remain the clearest evidence that growth has slowed without breaking.
June FOMC minutes showed officials divided on the direction of rates. Inflation concern increased, and a few officials supported tighter policy. The Fed is reacting to tariff costs, energy risk and strong investment demand. Markets should stop assuming the next policy move must be down.
Global
China
June consumer-price growth weakened while producer inflation accelerated to its fastest pace in almost four years. China is getting less help from benign factory prices, but household demand still lacks force.
Europe and Japan
Europe lacked a strong domestic catalyst and traded around global technology and war headlines. Japan's weak yen remains a cost problem, while renewed emphasis on central-bank independence raises the odds of less political tolerance for easy policy.
Global
The IMF lowered its 2026 global growth forecast to 3.0%, citing fallout from the Iran war. Softer growth alongside firmer inflation is the bad mix for long-duration assets.
Foreign Exchange Markets
The dollar touched a one-week high, then faded as the outlook for an Iran deal shifted. The yen strengthened late in the week as Japan considered pushing pension capital toward domestic assets. FX did not deliver a clear global growth signal. It traded policy and geopolitics.
For U.S. equities, a stable dollar is enough. A renewed dollar surge would tighten conditions for emerging markets and cut the translated earnings of U.S. multinationals just as reporting season starts.
Commodities and Energy Markets
Oil settled lower Friday on hopes for smoother shipping through Hormuz, but refined-fuel markets still showed supply stress. Gold came under pressure as the conflict raised inflation and rate-hike fears. The market treated geopolitical risk as an inflation shock, not a simple safe-haven event.
Commodity Read
Watch fuel prices, not just crude. If shipping improves but gasoline and diesel stay tight, headline oil will understate the pressure reaching consumers. That would matter directly for next month's inflation data and discretionary spending.
Debt and Fixed Income Markets
The Treasury curve moved higher. From Monday to Friday, the 2-year yield rose from 4.13% to 4.21%, the 10-year from 4.48% to 4.56%, and the 30-year from 4.99% to 5.06%. The parallel eight-basis-point move says the market raised the expected policy and inflation path rather than pricing one isolated maturity problem.
Up 8 basis points from Monday.
Back above the level that pressures growth multiples.
Fiscal and inflation risk remain embedded at the long end.
What to Watch Next Week
- June CPI and PPI. The market needs softer inflation to justify buying expensive growth while long yields rise.
- Bank earnings. JPMorgan, major lenders and credit-card data will show whether consumers remain healthy beneath the low-layoff headline.
- Technology guidance. AI shares now need stronger estimates, not recycled enthusiasm.
- The 10-year at 4.6%. A sustained break above that level would challenge the week's equity rebound.
- Hormuz shipping and refined-fuel spreads. Consumer inflation follows delivered fuel costs, not geopolitical headlines.
- Dollar direction. A stronger dollar plus higher yields would tighten the setup for global equities and crypto.