Review the latest Weekly Headings by CIO Larry Adam.
Key takeaways:
Geopolitical risks are still lingering in the background, but the story lately has been all about earnings. A strong 1Q26 season, paired with a steady drumbeat of upbeat management commentary, has helped push the S&P 500 to 21 record highs this year. But as earnings calls wind down, the market’s focus is shifting back to the bigger picture: the macro backdrop. And there’s no shortage of catalysts ahead.
In the coming weeks, investors will be navigating several key developments that could reintroduce volatility, including the prospect of a deal to end the war in Iran, fresh reads on inflation and the labor market, and the June 16-17 Federal Reserve (Fed) meeting, where Kevin Warsh will debut as chair alongside a rate decision and updated Summary of Economic Projections.
Below, we highlight where the economy stands, the key data points shaping the narrative, and the biggest risks markets may face in the weeks and months ahead.
Growth remains resilient
Despite headwinds from rising fuel costs and softer consumer sentiment, the economy is expanding at a solid pace. Growth is on track to reach 2.4% in 2026, modestly above potential, supported by strong AI-driven business investment and resilient consumer spending. On the business side, investment is emerging as a powerful driver of growth. Hyperscaler capex is projected to reach $720 billion in 2026 and surpass $1 trillion in the years ahead as companies build out artificial intelligence (AI) infrastructure. This surge in spending is already having a meaningful impact, contributing more than a full percentage point to Q1 gross domestic product (GDP). On the consumer side, near-term spending remains supported by higher tax refunds, helping to cushion the drag from weaker sentiment and elevated fuel costs.
Labor market has stabilized
While the job market remains stuck in a low-hire, low-fire environment, labor conditions appear to have found their footing after last year’s slowdown. Despite high-profile layoff announcements (including Meta, UPS, and Amazon) and ongoing concerns around AI-driven disruption, initial jobless claims remain near historically low levels. At the same time, payroll growth continues to show resilience, with gains above 100,000 in each of the past two months – well above the average monthly increase of only 10,000 in 2025. The unemployment rate has held steady at 4.3%, while wage growth is running at 3.6% year over year – just above its longer-run historical average.
Inflation is heading in the wrong direction
With inflation running hotter than expected, it has become a central concern in 2026. While tariff effects should fade, the war in Iran has introduced a new source of pressure. Surging energy prices have pushed headline inflation to 3.8% – the highest since 2023 – and driven the fastest two-month acceleration in nearly four years. Price pressures are broadening, with ISM price sub-indices at a four-year high and consumer inflation expectations moving higher. After five years above the Fed’s 2% target, policymakers’ tolerance for another overshoot is wearing thin, and markets are pricing in a rate hike this year (we still expect one rate cut).
*MAGMAN represents a composite of Microsoft, Apple, Google, Meta, Amazon, Nvidia.
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