NEW YORK, June 19, 2026, 16:02 EDT
- U.S. stock markets stayed shut Friday for Juneteenth. On Thursday, a rebound sent the S&P 500, Nasdaq and Dow to weekly gains.
- The S&P 500 closed Thursday at 7,500.58, rising 1.1%. The Nasdaq gained 1.9%. The Dow edged up 0.1%.
- Next week traders look to Micron earnings, inflation numbers, and any sign that the Federal Reserve’s hawkish talk could weigh on the AI trade.
U.S. stock markets stayed shut Friday for Juneteenth, locking in Thursday’s strong rally and leaving tech stocks out front as the week ended. The holiday closure left Thursday’s closing numbers untouched: the S&P 500 added 1.1%, the Nasdaq Composite was up 1.9%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average managed a 0.1% gain.
The timing is key as the rally faces fresh hurdles from Federal Reserve policy and questions about how long the artificial-intelligence surge can last. The Fed kept the federal funds rate steady at 3.50% to 3.75% this week, but investors re-evaluated the outlook for rates after the Fed’s inflation remarks.
S&P 500 finished the holiday-shortened week up 0.9%. The Dow rose 0.7%. The Nasdaq was stronger, advancing 2.4%. Russell 2000, which tracks smaller stocks, added 1.2% this week. The small-cap index had gained 2.1% on Thursday.
Chip stocks led gains. Intel jumped 10.6% Thursday after U.S. President Donald Trump said it would produce chips for Apple in the U.S. Nvidia added 3%, while Micron Technology climbed 8.7%, AP reported. But SpaceX dropped 3.6%, posting a second day of losses since its debut last week.
Fed policy stays tough to call. The central bank kept its stance that inflation is above its 2% target. The committee promised it “will deliver price stability” in the statement. Reuters reported nine Fed officials expect another hike by the end of 2026. Federal Reserve
Krishna Guha, vice chair and head of economics and central bank strategy at Evercore ISI, said the market move was “massively amplified” after Chair Kevin Warsh’s press conference, pointing to its tough stance on price stability. Diane Swonk, chief economist at KPMG US, called the statement “a gift” to Warsh, saying it locked in his inflation focus in the Fed’s unanimous statement. Reuters
Equity funds stayed in demand. U.S. equity funds pulled in $38.37 billion in the week ended June 17, the biggest weekly haul since November 2024. Tech sector funds brought in a record $21.46 billion, according to LSEG Lipper as reported by Reuters.
Micron is up next, reporting earnings Wednesday, June 24. Investors are watching the memory-chip maker as a gauge for data center and AI infrastructure demand. “There’s still a lot of juice in the AI trend,” Andy Pratt, director of investment strategy at Burney Company, told Reuters. Steve Kolano, chief investment officer at Integrated Partners, called semiconductor demand “through the roof.” Reuters
But there’s still a clear risk if things turn. A hotter inflation print, a firmer Fed, or a negative outlook from Micron could slam expensive growth stocks. Trouble in Middle East shipping could bring oil prices back up. Brent hovered near $80 Friday—still off about 8% this week. Rory Johnston at Commodity Context said traders had already “pricing in a deal” and smooth flow, but said that wasn’t locked in yet. Reuters
The PCE price index, which the Fed uses to track inflation, is due this week along with a final Q1 GDP reading. Drew Matus, chief market strategist at MetLife Investment Management, told Reuters that recent equity gains have helped consumers. But he said investors are alert to “the wealth effect going away” if the AI-driven rally stalls. Reuters