1) 📊 Last Week in Review (Week ending Friday 26 June 2026)
Performance snapshot (levels + weekly % + YTD):
- FTSE 100: 10,508 | +1.4% (YTD +5.7%)
- S&P 500: 7,354 | -2.0% (YTD +7.4%)
- MSCI World: 4,744 | -1.7% (YTD +7.1%, price index)
- UK 10y gilt yield: 4.74% (-11 bp) | US 10y: 4.38% (-12 bp)
- GBP/USD: 1.3203 (-0.2%) | Brent: $72 (-10.0%)
What moved markets:
- Mega-cap tech finally wobbled. The S&P 500 fell, but the Nasdaq and semiconductor names were hit harder as investors questioned whether AI spending can keep justifying stretched valuations.
- Oil reversed sharply. Brent fell about 10% as immediate supply fears eased, taking some pressure off inflation expectations and bond yields.
- UK assets held up well. The FTSE 100 rose despite political noise, helped by its defensive and value-heavy sector mix.
Sector & style:
- Best/Worst sector: Defence & Industrial Space +2.4% / Technology & Consumer Discretionary -3.1%
- Growth vs Value: Value outperformed Growth by 1.2% as the threat of prolonged high US interest rates hit expensive growth and AI infrastructure multiples.
- Large vs Small: Large Caps outperformed Small Caps by 0.4% due to generic global flight-to-safety flows during the peak mid-week equity pullbacks.
2) 🌟 The Defining Narrative
Can markets digest an AI/tech pullback without losing wider risk appetite?
Why it matters:
- If investors rotate from expensive mega-cap growth into cheaper sectors, the market can stay healthy.
- But if the tech sell-off becomes a valuation shock, it could push yields, credit spreads and volatility higher.
- The key swing factor is this week’s US labour market data: strong payrolls could revive rate-hike fears; softer data could support bonds and broader equities.
What confirms it / what breaks it:
- Confirms: US payrolls close to expectations, calmer oil prices, and no hawkish shock from Fed or ECB speakers.
- Breaks: Hot wage data, renewed oil disruption, or further weakness in AI-linked earnings expectations.
UK investor angle:
- A balanced global portfolio may benefit if leadership broadens beyond US mega-cap tech.
- Unhedged US exposure remains sensitive to GBP/USD, so currency can either cushion or magnify equity moves.
3) 🏦 Central Bank Watch
BoE
- What’s scheduled: Huw Pill speaks Monday 06:00; Sarah Breeden Tuesday 11:40; Andrew Bailey Wednesday 14:30 and Friday 16:00; Catherine Mann Thursday 15:00.
- Market pricing: No rate decision this week. Bank Rate was held at 3.75% in June, with a 7–2 vote and two members voting to hike.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether policymakers still see inflation risks as skewed higher after the oil-price retreat.
- UK implications: Hawkish language could lift short gilt yields and support sterling; softer language would help gilts but may weigh on GBP.
Fed
- What’s scheduled: Fed Chair Kevin Warsh speaks at the ECB Forum on Wednesday 14:30; US payrolls land Thursday 13:30.
- Market pricing: Markets lean towards a July hold, but a rate-hike tail risk remains.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether the Fed pushes back against rate-hike expectations or keeps optionality open.
- UK implications: US yields and the dollar will drive global equity valuations and unhedged US exposure.
ECB
- What’s scheduled: ECB Forum through the week; Christine Lagarde speaks Monday 18:30 and Wednesday 14:00; Eurozone CPI is also due Wednesday 14:00.
- Market pricing: Further tightening later in 2026 remains possible after the ECB’s June rate rise.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether energy inflation is treated as temporary or as a broader inflation threat.
- UK implications: Moves in euro rates affect European equities, GBP/EUR and global bond sentiment.
BoJ
- What’s scheduled: No BoJ decision this week; Japan Tankan survey due Wednesday 00:50.
- Market pricing: No immediate decision, but stronger data would keep later policy normalisation in play.
- Key thing to listen for: Whether corporate confidence supports more rate increases.
- UK implications: Yen volatility can spill into global risk appetite and Japanese equity returns.
4) 🌍 Macro Calendar
| Day (UK) | Region& Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mon 29 Jun, 06:00 | UK — BoE Pill speech | Early clue on whether the BoE is more worried about inflation or growth. |
| Mon 29 Jun, 18:30 | Eurozone — Lagarde opens ECB Forum | Sets the tone for European rates and bond markets. |
| Tue 30 Jun, 07:00 | UK — Q1 GDP final estimate | Revisions can move gilts, GBP and fiscal expectations. |
| Tue 30 Jun, 02:30 | China — NBS PMIs | Important read on global manufacturing and commodity demand. |
| Tue 30 Jun, 15:00 | US — Consumer Confidence & JOLTS | Shows whether households and employers are cooling. |
| Wed 1 Jul, 00:50 | Japan — Tankan survey | Key signal for BoJ policy and yen-sensitive assets. |
| Wed 1 Jul, 13:15 | US — ADP employment | A rough preview before official payrolls. |
| Wed 1 Jul, 14:00 | Eurozone — CPI flash estimate | Main inflation test for the ECB. |
| Wed 1 Jul, 14:30 | Global — Fed Chair Warsh / ECB Forum panel | Could shift expectations for US and global rates. |
| Wed 1 Jul, 15:00 | US — ISM Manufacturing PMI | Shows whether growth is slowing or inflation pressure is sticky. |
| Thu 2 Jul, 13:30 | US — Non-farm payrolls & jobless claims | The week’s biggest global market event. |
| Thu 2 Jul, 15:00 | US — Factory Orders | A check on business demand and capex. |
| Fri 3 Jul, morning | UK/Europe — Final Services PMIs | Services drive inflation and employment. |
| Fri 3 Jul | US — Markets closed for Independence Day observance | Lower liquidity could exaggerate moves after payrolls. |
5) 📊 Earnings Watch
US
- AeroVironment (AVAV) — Monday: Defence-drone demand, backlog conversion and margin delivery.
- Nike (NKE) — Tuesday: Turnaround progress, North America and China sales, inventories, discounting and full-year guidance.
- Constellation Brands (STZ) — this week: Beer volumes, pricing power, tariff/input-cost pressure and consumer resilience.
UK
- J Sainsbury (SBRY) — Tuesday: Grocery market share, food inflation, wage costs and Argos demand.
- Associated British Foods (ABF) — Wednesday: Primark sales, margins, sugar division trends and consumer spending signals.
Europe
- Prosus (PRX/PROSY) — Monday: Tencent exposure, e-commerce profitability, capital returns and valuation discount.
- Naspers (NPN/NPSNY) — Monday: Prosus-linked discount, buybacks and shareholder-return policy.
6) 💷 Fixed Income & Currency Outlook
A) UK Gilts / Rates
- Facts: UK 2y gilt yield around 4.14% (-14 bp); UK 10y around 4.74% (-11 bp).
- View: Neutral to modestly positive duration — yields are more attractive, but inflation and fiscal risks still argue against being too long.
- Watchlist: UK GDP revisions, BoE speeches, gilt supply and US payrolls.
B) FX — GBP Focus
- Facts: GBP/USD 1.3203 (-0.2%); GBP/EUR 1.1597 (+0.5%).
- View: Neutral / range-bound GBP — rate differentials, risk appetite and UK politics are pulling in different directions.
- Watchlist: BoE tone, US payrolls, oil prices and euro inflation.
7) 🧠 Sentiment Check
Current mood: Neutral (the market’s aggressive growth engine is slowing down to absorb reality).
Market gauges:
- VIX / MOVE: VIX jumped slightly to 14.20 but stays historically calm; the MOVE bond index remains elevated near 112, showing fixed-income investors are still highly anxious.
- Rates: Real yields remain sticky near long-term highs, acting as a natural brake on aggressive valuation expansion.
- Credit spreads: Minimal widening across prime brackets, indicating that underlying liquidity channels remain healthy.
- CNN FEAR & GREED INDEX: Slid to 39 (firmly in Fear territory), highlighting building caution under the surface of the major indices.
Positioning / flows:
- Institutional data shows mild profit-taking out of mega-cap technology and general rebalancing into defensive sectors and cash instruments.
Implication:
- Market positioning is highly vulnerable to upside inflation surprises; bad economic data will likely cause sharper downward moves in over-extended sectors.
8) 📈 Valuations & Expectations
Valuation snapshot:
- S&P 500 fwd P/E: 20.1–20.2x, above longer-term averages.
- FTSE 100 / UK proxy fwd P/E: 12.3x, below its long-term average.
Earnings expectations:
- Next-year EPS growth consensus: US 16.8%
- Revisions trend: US improving; UK more mixed and sector-dependent.
So what?
- US valuations need AI spending to become real earnings, not just big capex headlines.
- UK valuations offer more margin of safety, but the market still needs a clearer domestic growth and fiscal story.
9) 🗳️ Geopolitics & Wildcards
- Event: Middle East shipping security updates around the Strait of Hormuz.
- Impact: Global shipping container costs, oil supply chains, and international maritime insurance rates.
- What to watch: Direct retaliation headlines or expanded naval escort deployments from international coalitions.
- Most sensitive assets: Brent Crude oil, global shipping giants, and deep-value energy equities.
- Event: The UAE and Iraq production quota negotiations within OPEC.
- Impact: Long-term oil supply coordination and stability of international energy cartels.
- What to watch: Official statements regarding potential exit threats or rogue production limit overproduction.
- Most sensitive assets: Energy sector equities, commodity ETFs, and emerging market currencies.
10) ⚡ The Bottom Line
- If US payrolls and wages come in hot → then yields and the dollar may rise, pressuring growth stocks.
- If oil stays calm and Eurozone CPI eases → then bonds and rate-sensitive shares should get support.
- If Hormuz, Fed independence or UK fiscal headlines flare up → then volatility could return quickly.
© Clearly Investments Ltd. Educational information only. This is not investment advice.
