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Financials 2026-06-14

Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-14

The major indices delivered a mixed but generally resilient performance in the week ending June 12, with the S&P 500 eking out a 0.3% gain to close at 7,431.46, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped…

Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-14
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Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-14

Date: 2026-06-14 Coverage: Week ending 2026-06-12 + week ahead


1. Weekly Recap

The major indices delivered a mixed but generally resilient performance in the week ending June 12, with the S&P 500 eking out a 0.3% gain to close at 7,431.46, while the Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.2%. The standout was the small-cap Russell 2000, which surged 3.1%, signaling a broadening of market participation beyond mega-cap tech. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.8%, supported by strength in financials and consumer staples. The dominant theme was a rotation away from the year's high-flying tech and AI names into more defensive and value-oriented sectors, as investors digested the implications of a still-resilient economy and sticky inflation.

The macro backdrop was a mixed bag. The 10-year Treasury yield fell 7 basis points to 4.48%, providing some relief for growth stocks, while the 2-year yield dropped 8 basis points to 4.09%, flattening the curve slightly. Gold continued its sharp pullback, falling 2.7% on the week to $386.54, now down 9.5% over the past month, as the dollar stabilized. The VIX dropped 6.6% to 17.68, settling back below its 50-day moving average and suggesting that the worst of the recent volatility may be behind us. The week ended on a positive note, with the SpaceX IPO debut helping lift sentiment after a choppy few days.

2. Indices, Vol & Yields

Index/Asset Price Weekly % YTD %
S&P 500 7,431.46 0.3 8.4
Nasdaq Composite 25,888.84 -0.2 11.4
Dow Jones Industrial 51,202.26 0.8 5.8
Russell 2000 2,943.99 3.1 17.4
CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) 17.68 -6.6 21.8
Gold (SPDR GLD) 386.54 -2.7 -2.9
US Dollar Index (DXY) 99.81 -0.2 1.4
Treasury Yield Yield Weekly Change (bps)
2-Year 4.09% -8
10-Year 4.48% -7
30-Year 4.97% -4

3. Sector Rotation

Sector Weekly % Read
Utilities 1.39 Defensive bid as rates fall
Technology 0.94 Selective strength, not broad
Basic Materials 0.86 Commodity-linked resilience
Consumer Defensive 0.58 Staples in favor
Real Estate 0.57 Lower yields help REITs
Financial Services 0.37 Banks benefit from yield curve
Energy -0.26 Oil weakness drags
Consumer Cyclical -0.35 Consumer caution
Healthcare -0.37 Profit-taking after strong run
Industrials -0.71 Mixed economic signals
Communication Services -0.84 Mega-cap tech drag

The rotation was decidedly risk-on but with a defensive tilt. Utilities and Consumer Defensive led, suggesting investors are seeking stability even as they rotate into small caps. Financial Services held up well, helped by a still-steep yield curve. The laggards were Communication Services and Industrials, reflecting ongoing pressure on mega-cap tech names and uncertainty about the industrial cycle. This is a classic "broadening" pattern — not a full risk-on embrace, but a shift away from concentration risk.

4. Top Movers of the Week

Winners (Top 5)

Ticker Weekly % YTD %
AMD 4.3 128.9
BAC 4.5 0.1
KO 3.9 19.5
NKE 3.9 -29.0
JNJ 3.8 16.2

AMD was the standout winner, continuing its incredible YTD run (+128.9%) as AI chip demand remains robust. Bank of America (BAC) rallied on the back of a steepening yield curve and positive sentiment around financials. Coca-Cola (KO) and Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) benefited from the defensive rotation, while Nike (NKE) bounced from deeply oversold levels.

Losers (Bottom 5)

Ticker Weekly % YTD %
ORCL -13.1 -5.9
CRM -9.1 -34.6
MSFT -5.1 -17.4
AVGO -3.7 9.9
AAPL -3.5 7.4

Oracle (ORCL) was the worst performer, plunging 13.1% after a disappointing earnings report. Salesforce (CRM) continued its slide, now down 34.6% YTD, as the software sector faces headwinds. Microsoft (MSFT) fell 5.1%, breaking below its 50-day moving average, as AI enthusiasm wanes. Broadcom (AVGO) and Apple (AAPL) also suffered, reflecting broad tech weakness.

5. Earnings Recap

Ticker Beat/Miss EPS Actual vs Est Key Takeaway
ADBE Beat $5.96 vs $5.82 Adobe beat estimates, signaling continued demand for creative and document cloud services.

No major earnings with reported actuals in the window beyond Adobe.

6. Macro & News Themes

  • SpaceX IPO debut lifted market sentiment after a volatile week, providing a fresh catalyst for risk appetite.
  • Goldman Sachs analyzed the AI capex boom's impact on S&P 500 return on equity, highlighting how massive spending is reshaping corporate profitability.
  • AI is turning memory into a structural bottleneck, a theme that could benefit memory chip makers and create supply constraints.
  • Analyst moves included a double-upgrade for Intel and a Buy call on SpaceX post-IPO, signaling shifting sentiment in the AI hardware space.
  • Japan plans to send a delegation to Greenland to evaluate rare earth extraction, underscoring the strategic importance of critical minerals.
  • South Korea's stock rally shifts focus to a potential MSCI market upgrade, which could drive further inflows.
  • Booking Holdings was highlighted as a winner in online travel, with questions about whether it can win in AI travel.

7. Stock of the Week

AMD (Advanced Micro Devices) — Up 4.3% on the week, now up an astonishing 128.9% year-to-date.

AMD was the most consequential mover in the watchlist, extending its monster rally as the AI chip narrative continues to dominate. The stock closed at $511.57, well above both its 50-day ($386.78) and 200-day ($253.93) moving averages, confirming a powerful uptrend. The week's gain came amid broader tech weakness, suggesting that AMD is seen as a pure-play AI beneficiary that can withstand sector rotation.

For retail investors, AMD remains a high-conviction AI play but comes with significant risk. The stock has already priced in tremendous growth, and any disappointment in AI chip demand or competition from NVIDIA could trigger a sharp pullback. The stock is trading at a premium valuation, and the 50-day moving average at $386.78 represents a potential entry point if a pullback materializes. Investors should consider dollar-cost averaging rather than chasing the rally.

8. Week Ahead — Catalysts

Earnings: No major earnings with reported actuals in the window.

Economic Data: Data unavailable (not in current feeds).

Other Catalysts:

  • Continued fallout from the SpaceX IPO and its impact on the broader market.
  • AI-related analyst moves and commentary, particularly around memory and chip bottlenecks.
  • Geopolitical developments, including Japan's rare earth mission to Greenland.

9. Levels to Watch

  • S&P 500 (7,431.46): Above its 50-day MA (7,247.79) and 200-day MA (6,881.99) — bullish posture, but needs to hold 7,400 for momentum.
  • Nasdaq (25,888.84): Above 50-day MA (25,210.88) and 200-day MA (23,430.80) — tech weakness is a concern, but trend remains intact.
  • Dow Jones (51,202.26): Above both MAs (50-day: 49,558.57; 200-day: 48,029.83) — strong uptrend, supported by rotation into value.
  • Russell 2000 (2,943.99): Above 50-day MA (2,800.10) and 200-day MA (2,585.87) — small caps breaking out, watch for continuation.
  • VIX (17.68): Below 50-day MA (18.25) and 200-day MA (18.63) — volatility declining, supportive for risk assets.
  • Gold (386.54): Below both MAs (50-day: 421.38; 200-day: 406.62) — bearish, further downside possible.
  • US Dollar Index (99.81): Above both MAs (50-day: 98.88; 200-day: 98.78) — dollar stabilizing, which could pressure commodities.

10. Sources

Data Sources: Yahoo Finance, Financial Modeling Prep, U.S. Treasury

Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. Not investment advice. Do your own research.

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