The second quarter closed out on Tuesday, with stocks making some fairly substantial gains, the Dow closing at a record high for the second straight session, the S&P finishing just a few ticks below 7,500, and the NASDAQ gaining more than 1 1/2 percent.
Now that Alphabet Class A Shares (GOOGL) have been added to the Dow Industrials, it's a safe bet that record highs for the 30-stock index will become standard fare. The NASDAQ and S&P have a higher hill to climb in order to regain recent all-time highs. Still, the three major indices put in solid quarters, if only because of the fortuitous timing of President Trump's call for a ceasefire at the end of March, where stocks found a bottom. This made for an easy trade for those with inside information. The massive gains from April through the end of June may be based on suspicious sources.
The Dow was up 15.71% from March 31 to June 30. Over the same time span, the S&P 500 gained 14.87% and the NASDAQ rose 21.41%. Putting those quarterly figures in annualized perspective, the trio would be up anywhere from 60-80%, which would be incredible, especially since stocks are already considered to be wildly overvalued.
Staying with the rigged markets theme, might not July 1 mark the ultimate best time to take profits and skedaddle for the summer? Seems to be a willingness by some parties to angle quarter by quarter as the best means by which to land a whale or two investors. Tuesday's window dressing closes on the majors suggests such a plan may be afoot.
Discontinuing the current rally has many skeptics on watch, though their theory runs up against what may be a propitious period of second quarter earnings reports. There also is the prospect for the resumption of real hostilities with guns and bombs in the gulf region to consider. However, since narrative seems to be all that matters, rallying back to all-time highs on the NASDAQ and S&P needs to be factored into any trading calculus. As is the usual case, if everybody knew everything that was about to happen, everybody would be rich.
There have been some recent reports of buyer's remorse at the corporate level concerning AI replacements of humans over the past six months or so. A number of high-level managers are suggesting that AI isn't actually doing the job of laid-off, mid-tier employees, the costs savings promised not materializing as suggested. If the disappointment is widespread, it may show up in any number of earnings reports, keeping stocks on a leash through second quarter earnings season. Additionally, there are two FOMC meetings during the third quarter, one on July 28-29 and the later running through September 15 and 16. The impact of the Fed's action or non-action will have profound effects on market sentiment as there's a 66% chance that the FOMC will keep rates at 3.50-3.75% and 33% possibility that they will raise rates to 3.75-4.00% at the July meeting according to CME's FedWatch tool.
While raising the federal funds target rate would have a chilling effect on stocks and bonds, consensus, so far, seems to be in the stand still camp, though September could be of a different mind altogether. Calls for rate hikes on the heels of bad inflation readings through the gulf war scenario are tied to what were higher oil and gas prices, which have now subsided considerably. From a chartist's perspective, the likelihood of a severe stock turndown seems faint, being that the last serious threat to markets was merely three months ago. Middle ground, with stocks gyrating over the quarter might be the correct analysis of what comes next.
With stock futures solidly in the red Wednesday morning, market participants may be waiting for the ISM Manufacturing PMI for June, due out at 10:00 am. There may be cause for celebration or remorse, depending on the report. Manufacturing in the U.S. has been steady for months. June's level may be a non-event.
Heading into the session, Dow futures are down 130 points; NASDAQ futures are falling by 245; and, S&P futures are trending lower by about 17 points. As has been the recent trend, futures have been unreliable in predicting the open market's daily moves. They are not any serious indication of anything. Gold and silver continue to languish, up against inflation and rate hike impetus. Thursday's jobs report is on deck, but there isn't likely to be a surprise as the JOLTS number and this morning's ADP National Employment Report showed private employers added 98,000 jobs in June, a reasonable figure well within consensus expectations.
The answer to the question of whether it's "full speed ahead" for stocks or a pause in the narrative remains a tricky one.
At the Close, Tuesday, June 30, 2026:
Dow: 52,319.20, +136.46 (+0.26%)
NASDAQ: 26,213.72, +393.57 (+1.52%)
S&P 500: 7,499.36, +58.93 (+0.79%)
NYSE Composite: 23,834.23, +31.53 (+0.13%)
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