1. Executive Summary


2. Asset Allocation Analysis

Recommended Tactical Allocation: - Equities: 55% (neutral — trimmed from 58%) - Fixed Income: 27% (neutral) - Commodities: 9% (overweight) - Cash / Alternatives: 9% (overweight)

Total: 100%.

Rationale:

Last week the call was "participate but don't chase." This week the market chased for us — straight into a wall — and the prudent response is to take a single notch of equity risk off the top (58% → 55%) and add it to cash. The trigger was not a growth scare but a rate shock: a 172K jobs print roughly double expectations pushed the 10-year to 4.55% and the 2-year to a multi-year-high 4.17%, and the market flipped from pricing cuts to pricing a ~50% chance of a hike. Higher discount rates compress the richest multiples first, which is why the Nasdaq fell 4.2% while the Dow lost just 0.3%. That is a de-rating of expensive duration, and the cleanest defense is to hold less of the most expensive thing and more of the thing that yields 4% while you wait.

We keep equities at a neutral 55%, not underweight, for one important reason: breadth never broke. About 55% of S&P 500 stocks remain above their 50-day moving average and ~59% above their 200-day — the selloff was a narrow, top-heavy unwind of the AI/mega-cap trade, not a broad market breakdown. Financials, healthcare, staples and energy actually absorbed flows. A market where the average stock is fine but the generals stumbled is a market to rotate within, not to flee. Monday June 8's sharp relief bounce (semis up double digits) underscores that dip-buyers are still very much alive.

The funding for caution again comes from commodities (9% overweight) and a now-elevated 9% cash sleeve rather than from gutting equities or extending bond duration. The one risk this market is genuinely exposed to is sticky inflation forcing the Fed's hand — and a broad commodity index up ~40% year-over-year (energy/Iran-driven) is both the cause and a partial hedge. Note the nuance: gold fell ~3.3% this week as real yields jumped, so the commodity overweight should tilt toward broad/energy-heavy baskets rather than leaning entirely on bullion. Cash and T-bills yielding ~4% have rarely had lower opportunity cost — they are the dry powder to deploy after the June 10 CPI tells us whether the hike scare is real.


3. Top-Performing ETFs

Figures are total-return / price approximations drawn from web sources (Slickcharts, US News, NerdWallet, Morningstar, 24/7 Wall St., financecharts) and live FMP quotes as of June 5–8, 2026. Verify on your platform before trading. All picks screened for >$500M AUM and reasonable expense ratios; leveraged/decay products are excluded or explicitly flagged speculative.

Equity ETFs

Year-to-Date Performance Leaders: 1. XLE — Energy Select Sector SPDR (~+21–34% YTD) - 2026's durable leadership group. Iran tensions and a firm crude tape keep energy bid, and it's the most direct inflation hedge as commodities run ~40% YoY. Large, cheap (ER 0.08%), and a genuine diversifier against the AI trade that just cracked. 2. XLB / materials — Materials Select Sector SPDR (~+17–18% YTD) - Riding a rebound in commodity prices and metals demand tied to the AI-infrastructure build-out and global growth. A cyclical, lower-duration way to stay invested without paying mega-cap-growth multiples. 3. SMH — VanEck Semiconductor ETF (still positive YTD, but momentum broken) - The 2026 runaway leader that just took its worst week of the year on the Broadcom AI miss. Long-term thesis intact; near-term in a "show-me" reset. Own on weakness, dollar-cost-averaged — don't chase.

Recent Performance (1-Month): 1. XLF — Financials Select Sector SPDR (positive) — higher yields/steeper curve lifted banks as money rotated out of tech. 2. XLE — Energy Select Sector SPDR (positive) — the rotation/inflation winner. 3. RSP — Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight (outperformed cap-weight) — equal-weight beat the cap-weighted S&P as the mega-cap generals lagged.

Fixed Income ETFs

Top Performers (front-end carry is king this year; price returns are muted with yields rising): 1. SGOV — iShares 0–3 Month Treasury (~+1.5–2% YTD, ~4.0% yield) — the best risk-adjusted holding in the bucket right now: ~4% carry, zero duration, daily liquidity. The dry-powder vehicle. 2. USIG — iShares Broad USD Investment Grade Corporate (low-single-digit YTD, ~5.0% yield) — up-in-quality IG corporate, intermediate duration, ER ~0.04%. Income with cushion. 3. VGSH — Vanguard Short-Term Treasury (~+2% YTD, ~4.1% yield) — 1–3y Treasuries, the duration sweet spot while the front end is repricing higher. ER 0.04%.

International ETFs

Top Performers (international has led the US in 2026 on cheaper valuations; the firmer dollar this week is a near-term headwind to watch): 1. VXUS — Vanguard Total International Stock (~+12% YTD) — one-ticket developed + EM ex-US; ER 0.05%. Core diversification away from US mega-cap concentration. 2. VEA — Vanguard FTSE Developed Markets (~+11% YTD) — Europe (defense/fiscal spend) and Japan (governance reform); lower-multiple, less AI-concentrated than the US. 3. IEMG — iShares Core MSCI Emerging Markets (~+7% YTD) — broad, cheap EM (ER 0.09%); China/India/Taiwan. Watch the dollar — a sustained DXY bounce trims unhedged EM returns.

Commodity / Alternative ETFs

Top Performers: 1. PDBC — Invesco Optimum Yield Diversified Commodity No K-1 (~+30%+ YTD) — broad, energy-heavy commodities; the cleanest one-ticket inflation-beta holding (ER ~0.59%) and the preferred real-asset expression now that gold has wobbled. 2. GLDM — SPDR Gold MiniShares (~flat YTD after this week's pullback) — physical gold at a low ER (~0.10%); gold fell ~3.3% to ~$4,340/oz as real yields jumped. Still a long-term debasement hedge, but no longer the one-way trade it was — size accordingly. 3. DBA — Invesco Agriculture Fund (positive YTD) — softs/agriculture; a diversifier within the commodity sleeve that's less tied to the energy/Iran swing factor.


4. Risk Management Signals

Volatility Indicators

Options Market Signals

Credit Market Indicators

Market Breadth

Safe Haven Flows


5. Sector Rotation Strategy

Sectors to Overweight

  1. Financials - Rationale: The week's clearest rotation destination. Higher-for-longer yields and a steeper curve (+38 bp 2s10s) lift bank net interest margins, and the group is not duration-rich, so it benefits from the very rate move that hurt tech. The contrarian value leadership of this regime. - Recommended exposure: ~16% of equity sleeve (above benchmark). - Top ETF: XLF — Financials Select Sector SPDR (or KBE for banks).
  2. Energy - Rationale: 2026's durable leadership (XLE ~+21–34% YTD), a direct inflation hedge with commodities +40% YoY, and live Iran optionality. Provides ballast against an inflation/rate surprise — exactly the live risk. - Recommended exposure: ~12% of equity sleeve. - Top ETF: XLE — Energy Select Sector SPDR.
  3. Health Care - Rationale: Defensive ballast that caught a bid as growth was sold; reasonable valuations and low rate-sensitivity. The right kind of defense for a hawkish-rate, slowing-momentum tape. - Recommended exposure: ~13% of equity sleeve. - Top ETF: XLV — Health Care Select Sector SPDR.

Sectors to Underweight

  1. Information Technology - Rationale: The epicenter of the rout (−5% to −6% on the week) and the most exposed to a rising 10-year. After Broadcom's AI miss, the cohort is in a "show-me" reset; the secular story is intact but near-term risk/reward is poor at still-rich multiples. Trim toward — not below — a defensible core; this is a great long-term holding bought on weakness, not chased. - Recommended exposure: ~24% of equity sleeve (below the ~30%+ benchmark weight).
  2. Real Estate - Rationale: The most rate-sensitive group; a 10-year back to 4.55% and a live hike scare are direct headwinds to a bond-proxy sector. Little edge until the rate picture stabilizes. - Recommended exposure: ~2% of equity sleeve (below benchmark).

Neutral Sectors


6. Fixed Income Strategy

Yield Curve Analysis

Curve Shape: Normal / positively sloped, but the whole curve shifted higher this week on the hot jobs print and hike repricing. Implications: A positive slope with a rising front end signals a market pricing "higher-for-longer, with hike risk back on the table." That is a headwind for long-duration assets (long bonds, REITs, expensive growth) and a tailwind for cash and the front end. The 30-year at ~5.0% embeds real term-premium and inflation risk; we would not reach for it here.

Duration Recommendation

Recommended Duration: Short-to-Intermediate (≈ 2–5 years), tilted to the front end. Rationale: With the 2-year at 4.17% and a live hike scare, the front end offers ~4%+ carry with minimal price risk — the best risk-adjusted spot on the curve. Intermediate Treasuries (VGSH/VGIT) add modest duration if the rate scare fades, but we'd keep a heavy T-bill (SGOV) anchor for liquidity and optionality into the June 10 CPI and June 16–17 FOMC. Avoid long duration until there's a clear inflation inflection.

Credit Quality

Recommended Mix: - Investment Grade: 52% - High Yield: 10% - Government/Agency: 38%

Total: 100%.

Rationale: With HY spreads still tight (~300–315 bp even after widening) and IG near ~85–90 bp, credit pays little for the risk and we stay predominantly up-in-quality. IG corporates and Treasuries capture most of the available yield with far better downside protection; a small HY sleeve harvests carry. The modest spread-widening this week is the kind of move that, if it extends on a growth scare, would let this mix add HY at better levels with dry powder in hand.


7. Geographic Allocation

United States

Recommended Allocation: 62% Rationale: The US still hosts the deepest markets and the AI/earnings leadership, but this week exposed the cost of its mega-cap concentration — when the generals stumble, the cap-weighted index stumbles. We hold US at 62% (below a typical home-heavy default) and lean the US sleeve toward value/equal-weight to dilute that concentration risk.

Developed International

Recommended Allocation: 26% Key Markets: Europe (defense and fiscal spending), Japan (corporate-governance reform). Rationale: Developed-ex-US has led the US in 2026 (VXUS ~+12% YTD) on cheaper valuations and less AI concentration. The one near-term caveat is the firmer dollar this week, which trims unhedged returns — monitor DXY, but the structural diversification case stands.

Emerging Markets

Recommended Allocation: 12% Key Markets: China (valuation rerating), India (structural growth), Taiwan/Korea (semis supply chain). Rationale: EM (IEMG ~+7% YTD) offers cheap valuations and growth, but it is the most dollar-sensitive sleeve and the most tied to the AI-hardware cycle that just wobbled. Keep a measured overweight versus a US-only stance, sized for its higher volatility and this week's dollar strength.


8. Strategic Recommendations

Top 3–5 Strategic Moves for Current Environment

  1. Raise cash and own the CPI — don't fight Friday's tape. - Action: Lift cash/T-bills to ~9% by trimming the richest growth exposure. - Rationale: A hawkish rate shock with a binary CPI two days out warrants dry powder; ~4% carry makes waiting cheap, and the better entry comes after June 10 resolves the hike question. - Implementation: SGOV / BIL (T-bills); fund from trimming concentrated tech/QQQ. - Risk: Opportunity cost if CPI is soft and the dip-buyers (already active Monday) finish the recovery without you.

  2. Rotate with the regime: overweight Financials and Energy, trim Tech to a core. - Action: Tilt the equity sleeve toward value/cyclicals that benefit from higher rates and the inflation theme. - Rationale: Higher-for-longer yields lift bank NIM (XLF); energy is the YTD leader and inflation hedge (XLE); both are low-duration. Tech stays a long-term core, owned on weakness — not chased. - Implementation: XLF, XLE; pair core VOO/QQQM with RSP (equal-weight) to cut mega-cap concentration. - Risk: A soft CPI snaps the rotation back to growth; keep the value tilt a tilt, not an all-in bet.

  3. Stay short on duration and up-in-quality in credit. - Action: Concentrate fixed income in T-bills, 1–3y Treasuries and IG corporates; avoid the long end. - Rationale: A rising front end (2Y 4.17%) and a 5% 30-year argue for front-end carry with minimal price risk; HY/IG spreads are too tight to reach for. - Implementation: SGOV, VGSH, USIG; VGIT to add duration only if the rate scare fades. - Risk: A surprise dovish pivot would mean missing some long-bond price upside — an acceptable trade for the carry and safety.

  4. Hold a real-asset hedge — but broaden it beyond gold. - Action: Keep commodities at a ~9% overweight, tilted to broad/energy baskets. - Rationale: Sticky inflation (commodities +40% YoY) is the live tail risk; this week proved gold alone is not a reliable hedge when real yields spike (gold −3.3%). A diversified commodity sleeve hedges the inflation tail more robustly. - Implementation: PDBC (broad/energy), XLE (equity energy), a smaller GLDM bullion position. - Risk: A growth slowdown that cools commodities; size as a hedge, not a thematic bet.

  5. Diversify internationally and via equal-weight to fix the concentration problem this week exposed. - Action: Maintain ~38% of the equity sleeve ex-US and broaden the US sleeve with equal-weight. - Rationale: The selloff was a mega-cap concentration event; international (cheaper, less AI-heavy) and equal-weight directly reduce that single-point-of-failure risk. - Implementation: VXUS/VEA/IEMG abroad; RSP at home. - Risk: A firmer dollar (this week's move) is a near-term drag on unhedged international — monitor DXY.


9. Risk Considerations

Key Risks to Monitor: - Sticky inflation / a Fed hike: A broad commodity index +40% YoY and a hot jobs print have markets pricing ~50% odds of a hike by year-end. A hot May CPI (Jun 10) could confirm it. Impact: further multiple compression, especially in long-duration growth and rate-sensitive sectors. - AI-capex "show-me" phase: Broadcom's miss and the Meta/Alphabet equity raises suggest AI spend is lumpier and more capital-hungry than priced. Impact: continued de-rating of the concentrated AI/semis complex that still anchors the indices. - Mega-cap concentration: This week proved the cap-weighted index is hostage to a handful of names; another stumble in the generals drags the S&P regardless of healthy breadth. Impact: index drawdown despite an "okay" average stock. - Long-end / term-premium risk: A 30-year at ~5.0% amid heavy issuance (10Y and 30Y auctions this week) and hike fears could re-steepen violently. Impact: losses on long-duration bonds, REITs, utilities. - Safe-haven failure: Gold fell with equities this week as real yields rose — a reminder that the usual hedge can stop working in a rate shock. Impact: portfolios relying on gold for protection were caught offside.

Hedging Strategies: For this hawkish-rate, correcting-but-not-broken environment, hedge with cash and quality rather than chasing now-pricier optionality: (1) hold ~9% cash/T-bills (SGOV/BIL) at ~4% — the cleanest hedge and dry powder; (2) keep a broad commodity/energy sleeve (PDBC/XLE) as the inflation hedge, with only a smaller gold position given this week's failure; (3) tilt equities toward value/defensive and equal-weight (XLF, XLV, RSP) to cut duration and concentration; (4) keep fixed income front-end and up-in-quality; and (5) for options-comfortable investors, a modest SPY put-spread through the June 16–17 FOMC — VIX at ~21 is no longer cheap, so favor spreads over outright puts.


10. Market Environment Assessment

Current Regime: Bull market in a tactical correction — moderate confidence. The nine-week uptrend broke on a hawkish rate shock, but breadth held (~55%/59% above key averages), credit stayed calm, and Monday is bouncing — this reads as a narrow de-leveraging of the AI/mega-cap trade, not the start of a bear market. Direction near-term: sideways-to-cautious until CPI resolves the rate question. Market Cycle Position: Late cycle. Full valuations, tight credit spreads, sticky inflation, and a Fed that may hike rather than cut are classic late-stage markers — now with the added wrinkle of a leadership rotation out of the prior winners. Recommended Risk Posture: Moderate-to-Defensive. One notch more cautious than last week: stay invested at neutral-trimmed equity weight, rotate toward value/defensives, raise cash, shorten duration, and keep an inflation hedge — respect a regime where the safe assumption (Fed cuts, AI only goes up) is now in question.


11. Sources & Disclosures

Cited articles & data (web search + live FMP quotes, June 5–8, 2026): - TheStreet — Stock Market Today (June 5, 2026): Nasdaq falls 4% as semiconductor slide wipes $1T: https://www.thestreet.com/stock-market-today/stock-market-today-dow-jones-sp-500-nasdaq-updates-june-05-2026 - CNBC — Nasdaq falls 4%, worst day since April 2025 as traders flee chip stocks: https://www.cnbc.com/2026/06/04/stock-market-today-live-updates.html - The Motley Fool — Broadcom shares plunge after AI outlook misses (June 4, 2026): https://www.fool.com/coverage/stock-market-today/2026/06/04/stock-market-today-june-4-broadcom-shares-plunge-after-ai-outlook-misses-high-investor-expectations/ - Advisor Perspectives — Treasury Yields Snapshot: June 5, 2026: https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2026/06/05/treasury-yields-snapshot-june-5-2026 - Kitco — Gold and silver tumble after hot jobs print lifts dollar, Treasury yields: https://www.kitco.com/news/article/2026-06-05/gold-and-silver-tumble-after-hot-jobs-print-lifts-dollar-treasury-yields - BullionVault — Gold Erases Last of 2026 Price Gains as Fed Rate Bets Soar: https://www.bullionvault.com/gold-news/gold-price-news/gold-fed-rates-jobs-060520261 - Yahoo Finance — These 3 Sectors Are Crushing Tech in 2026: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/3-sectors-crushing-tech-2026-163500903.html - StreetStats — S&P 500 Breadth & Momentum (% above 50/200-day, June 5): https://streetstats.finance/markets/breadth-momentum/SP500 - ycharts — CBOE Equity & Total Put/Call Ratios: https://ycharts.com/indicators/cboe_equity_put_call_ratio - Slickcharts — S&P 500 / Nasdaq-100 YTD Return: https://www.slickcharts.com/sp500/returns/ytd - HeyGoTrade — Week Ahead: CPI, Oracle Earnings and the Chip Selloff (June 8): https://www.heygotrade.com/en/news/weekly-economic-outlook-2026-06-08/ - FRED (St. Louis Fed) — VIX, DGS2/DGS10/DGS30, T10Y2Y, ICE BofA IG & HY OAS: https://fred.stlouisfed.org/ - Live index/quote data (S&P, Nasdaq, Dow, Russell, VIX, gold, CVX/MSFT/GOOGL) — Financial Modeling Prep MCP, June 8, 2026.

Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. Not investment advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.


Data sources: live FMP MCP index/equity quotes (June 8) plus web search via WebSearch (yields, breadth, credit, sentiment, sector and ETF figures). Several FMP fundamental endpoints were intermittently rate-limited this run; affected figures are web-sourced and labeled approximate or estimated where noted. Analysis generated: 2026-06-08