Economic Update 6-3-2026
On a holiday-shortened week, economic data included U.S. GDP growth being downgraded slightly for Q1, stronger durable goods orders, mixed housing metrics, along with continued weak consumer spending.
Equities experienced gains globally for the most part last week, as hopes for Middle East resolution and a reopening of supply lines was cautiously cheered by markets. Bonds fared well also, as inflation fears were reduced, pulling down yields. Commodity prices fell back for energy and agriculture, largely for the same reasons.
U.S. stocks saw gains again last week, as sentiment was helped by the higher chances of a Middle East peace deal, or at least a 60-day ceasefire extension and reopening of Strait of Hormuz shipping traffic. Markets had taken a step back by Thurs., as U.S. airstrikes again appeared to raise the temperature in the region and pushed out hopes for resolution. Sentiment continues to be dominated by the Middle East on a week-to-week, or even day-to-day basis, coinciding with the most recent media reports, coupled with strong demand for AI hardware that has sharply rewarded specific industry groups and world regions. By sector, technology, consumer discretionary, and materials stocks fared positively; on the negative side were energy (as oil prices corrected sharply), as well as defensive consumer staples and utilities. Real estate also fell back slightly, despite a drop in yields.
