Today: 17 June 2026
AI Names Drop, Oil Upends Inflation Bets, US Stocks Slip
17 June 2026
2 mins read

US shares slip as Fed keeps rates steady, eyes possible 2026 hike

New York, June 17, 2026, 16:06 (EDT)

  • The S&P 500 dropped 1.2%. The Dow was down 506.51 points, and the Nasdaq lost 1.3% following the Federal Reserve decision. The Motley Fool
  • Fed kept rates steady at 3.50%–3.75%. New projections from the central bank now signal higher inflation and rates into 2026. Federal Reserve
  • Tech lost ground again after SpaceX hit new highs. Retail sales came in stronger, keeping eyes on inflation that hasn’t eased. Reuters

U.S. stocks slumped late Wednesday. The Federal Reserve kept rates unchanged, but markets didn’t find much hope for a rate cut soon. The S&P 500 slid 91.23 points, or 1.2%, to 7,420.12. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 506.51 points, or 1.0%, to 51,493.16. The Nasdaq Composite was down 354.69 points, or 1.3%, closing at 26,021.66. The Motley Fool

Fed Keeps Rate Steady as Warsh Chairs First Meeting The Fed held its benchmark rate at 3.50% to 3.75%, keeping its main policy tool unchanged in Kevin Warsh’s first meeting as chair. The call was unanimous, 12-0. That held off a recent relief trade and put rates back in focus. The central bank said it still sees inflation as high and repeated its price stability pledge. Federal Reserve

The projections hit. The Fed’s “dot plot”—the chart with policymakers’ rate guesses—now shows a median 2026 funds rate of 3.8%, higher than the 3.4% from March. Median inflation for 2026 jumped, now at 3.6%, up from 2.7%. Core PCE, which cuts out food and energy, moved to 3.3% from 2.7%. Federal Reserve

The statement landed as a hawkish turn, analysts said, signaling tighter policy than markets were set for. Michael Pearce at Oxford Economics said Warsh “took an axe” to the statement. Kay Haigh at Goldman Sachs Asset Management said she still doesn’t expect a hike but called the “path…narrow.” Tom Graff at Facet said the move was “a bit more hawkish.” Reuters

Markets tied to rates shifted with equities. According to Reuters, after the Fed decision, short-term U.S. rate futures leaned toward a hike by September instead of a pause. The dollar also pushed higher on the euro as traders looked at inflation risk. Reuters

Growth stocks took a hit. SpaceX fell 5.2% Wednesday, after jumping Tuesday and closing above Amazon’s market cap for the first time—though it briefly topped Microsoft, too. Amazon lost 3.5%, Microsoft was down 3.9% and Nvidia dropped 1.4%. Higher rates usually drag on long-duration growth names, as their profits are further out. Reuters

Fed stays patient as retail sales beat. May U.S. retail sales climbed 0.9%, more than the 0.5% consensus from Reuters-polled economists. Service-station sales jumped 3.4%. Higher spending lifts growth, but the strong print complicates the Fed’s case that inflation is slowing. Reuters

The risk isn’t one-way. If oil prices keep falling and consumers ease up on spending, but unemployment stays low, the market might level out. But hostilities in the Middle East could flare again, or a tech pullback could hit wealthy spenders. That would push up energy inflation and raise the odds of more Fed hikes, which could drag stocks lower. Gus Faucher at PNC told Reuters the risks for consumer spending are on the downside, and a tech selloff could make high earners cut back, too. Reuters

Single-name action was part of the afternoon chop. Shares of CME Group slipped after news that CEO Terry Duffy will leave the company. Smartbird, the company rebranding from Allbirds, soared on word of its new name and incoming chief executive. Reuters

Market conditions have turned tougher. Consumption is staying strong, inflation forecasts are moving up, and the Fed chair is cutting back on forward guidance. Investors are more dependent on each new report. Wednesday’s message stood out: no sign of a cut, but renewed risk of more hikes. Stocks dropped.

Stock Market Today

  • Sonos Shares Fall 4.7% Amid New Competition from Google Home Speaker
    June 17, 2026, 5:40 PM EDT. Shares of Sonos (NASDAQ:SONO) dropped 4.7% following the launch of Google's $100 Google Home Speaker, a new competitor in the smart home audio market. The device features Google's AI assistant, Gemini, and offers 360-degree sound. Sonos shares closed at $14.30, down 3.7% from the previous day, reflecting investor concerns about rising competition and potential U.S. tariffs on consumer tech. Despite the decline, shares remain volatile, down 18.9% year-to-date and 25.9% below their 52-week high of $19.16. Market watchers note that the latest sell-off may not signal a fundamental shift. Recent retail sales data suggest strong consumer spending, offering a mixed outlook for Sonos amid intensified market pressures.

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