
Stocks are higher this morning on good news from the Iranian situation. Bonds and MBS are flat.
This week is relatively busy despite markets being closed on Friday and an early close on Thursday. We will get home price data on Tuesday, with FHFA and Case Shiller along with job openings. The jobs report will be released on Thursday morning, and Kevin Warsh will speak on Wednesday at the ECB Forum and we will get the ISM Manufacturing report along with ADP jobs data.
Consumer sentiment improved in June, driven by falling gasoline prices. “Consumer sentiment confirmed its early-month reading, rising about 10% above May as gas prices moderated. Increases were seen across income, wealth, and political affiliation. Expected business conditions over the next five years surged 16% as consumers’ worries over long-term consequences of the Iran conflict appear to be easing. Still, sentiment remains in unfavorable territory at 13% below the February 2026 reading prior to the start of the Iran conflict, and nearly 20% less than a year ago. The cost of living remains at the forefront of consumers’ minds; for the third straight month, over half of consumers spontaneously mentioned that high prices are weighing down their personal finances.”
Year-ahead inflation expectations moderated to 4.6%, while long term expectations decreased markedly from 3.9% to 3.3%.
Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari says he expects the Fed to hike the Fed Funds rate by 25 basis points this year. “In March, I had penciled in one rate cut by the end of the year. In June, I’ve changed that to one rate hike by the end of the year,” the policymaker said during a panel discussion at the Aspen Ideas Festival. “It’s a pencil, and so we’re going to have to see how the data comes in.”
Kashkari believes that rising energy prices have lifted inflation enough that a hike is probably necessary, and the recent decline probably won’t be enough to forestall that. “The inflation is being driven by supply dynamics, so whether it’s tariffs pushing up the price of goods that we buy from abroad, it’s the fertilizer that’s been disrupted because of the Strait of Hormuz and energy and oil prices from the Strait of Hormuz,” he said. “Then it’s also being driven by massive investment, hundreds of billions of dollars a year into data centers and all of the associated infrastructure that goes with that. Anything that touches those sectors, the prices are skyrocketing on those parts of the economy.”
It looks like this year’s Spring Selling Season was more or less a dud, with the Iran War introducing uncertainty and dampening sentiment. The bright spots in the market are the Bay Area, which is being positively impacted by AI demand and jobs, the Northeast which is part of the hip-to-be-square trade and pockets of the Midwest. The Sun Belt continues to struggle, although that is still where people are choosing to relocate.



















