Need a boost? Change your socks!
Or, in the case of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, change your stocks!
The Dow replaced Verizon (VZ) with Alphabet Class A (GOOGL) shares on Monday and the stock added nearly five percent on the day. Conversely, Verizon shares slid by five percent. Dow Jones' sleight-of-hand propelled the Dow Industrials to a record close, while also helping the NASDAQ and S&P regain some of their losses, "some" being the operative word.
Since the start of June peaks, the S&P is down 2.10%, the NASDAQ off by 4.68% as questions concerning the profitability of the AI buildout among big providers like Microsoft, Apple, Alphabet, Amazon, and others continue to keep tech stocks under wraps, for now.
With just three days left in the holiday-shortened week, the tech threat may give way to employment issues. According to the BLS, total non-farm payroll employment increased by 172,000 in May 2026, similar to the gain of 179,000 in April. While those numbers seem impressive, in the know investors understand that the BLS figures are little more than guesses, their monthly and annual revisions reveal a weaker foundation and an agency hell-bent on keeping up appearances. June non-farm payroll closes out the week prior to the market open on Thursday.
As the fragile truce between the U.S. and Iran continues to hold up, oil flows are beginning to improve, though they are a long way from the millions of barrels that flowed out of the Persian Gulf prior to the recent conflict. The MOU has kept the warring parties at bay despite protests from Israel and American neocons. One can never discount enough Israel's dedication to wiping out their neighbors, and that remains a real issue as America heads towards its 250th anniversary of independence.
As the opening ball approaches, stock futures are flat to slightly lower, gold and silver remain under pressure and WTI crude futures are hovering just above $70/barrel.
The "all's well" narrative espoused by the White House seems to have fewer true believers. Wile stocks are not likely to collapse any time soon, a slow bleed after the Fourth of July may be the path of least resistance, with a great deal of confidence riding on second quarter earnings due out in July and August.
Congress, which doesn't do much of anything for anybody but themselves, will be taking their usual month-long vacation in about five weeks, leaving markets to fend for themselves without input from the government. Deficit spending continues to provide capital everywhere its needed. Drifting about may be the ultimate story for the summer months. After this week, there won't be another short trading week until Labor Day.
Awaiting the jobs report and the beginning of earnings season, stocks may have a hard time justifying gains, though there still seems to be no shortage of fun money for speculative bets.
A mixed bag.
At the close, Monday, June 29, 2026: Dow: 52,182.74, +306.63 (+0.59%) NASDAQ: 25,820.14, +522.53 (+2.07%) S&P 500: 7,440.43, +86.41 (+1.18%) NYSE Composite: 23,802.71, +113.47 (+0.48%)
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