Today: 24 May 2026
Wall Street’s 8-Week Rally Goes Into Memorial Day With Inflation in View
24 May 2026
3 mins read

Wall Street’s 8-Week Rally Goes Into Memorial Day With Inflation in View

NEW YORK, May 24, 2026, 13:03 EDT

  • U.S. equities have put up eight weeks of gains for the S&P 500. The Dow finished Friday trading at an all-time high.
  • NYSE traders get a holiday Monday for Memorial Day, so the week is shorter as markets wait on inflation numbers and some late earnings.
  • The April PCE inflation report, the Fed’s preferred measure of prices, is expected Thursday at 8:30 a.m. EDT.

Stocks are trading near highs as Wall Street moves into a week shortened by the holiday. Earnings are taking a back seat to inflation, bond yields, and the question of whether investors want to keep buying after eight weeks of gains.

The timing is key. Q1 earnings have powered a lot of the move in equities, led by technology and AI, but traders are looking ahead to April personal consumption expenditures numbers. This price index is watched by the Federal Reserve since it captures what consumers spend across many goods and services.

U.S. stock markets will stay shut Sunday and the New York Stock Exchange won’t open Monday for Memorial Day. Trading picks back up Tuesday. That squeezes the reaction time for this week’s inflation and consumer data, plus the final wave of earnings.

Stocks closed up Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average finishing 294.04 points, or 0.58%, higher at a new record of 50,579.70. The S&P 500 climbed 27.75 points, or 0.37%, to 7,473.47. The Nasdaq Composite added 50.87 points, or 0.19%, to 26,343.97. The S&P 500 has now logged eight straight weeks of gains, its longest winning streak since late 2023.

Stocks drew support from signs of movement in U.S.-Iran negotiations and a strong run of earnings. “The earnings and economic backdrop looked ‘really solid,’” said James St. Aubin, chief investment officer at Ocean Park Asset Management. He said headlines from the war had been a major drag on equities. Reuters

Macro drivers are back in focus. Anthony Saglimbene, chief market strategist at Ameriprise, said the rush over earnings is past, with “company reporting is kind of done now.” Jim Baird, chief investment officer at Plante Moran Financial Advisors, took a sharper view: “Inflation concerns continue to flare.” Reuters

March PCE prices climbed 3.5% year over year, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. Core PCE, which excludes food and energy, was up 3.2%. The next update, covering April, is due out Thursday at 8:30 a.m. EDT.

Fed minutes out earlier showed most officials said “some policy firming” might be needed if inflation keeps running above 2%. The central bank kept its target range at 3.5% to 3.75% at the April meeting. The next meeting is scheduled for June 16-17. Federal Reserve

Bond yields are still the sticking point. When bond prices slip, yields jump, which can put stocks under pressure by lifting borrowing costs and making shares seem pricey. The 10-year Treasury yield hit 4.69% this week, the highest since January 2025, before settling back to 4.56%, Reuters reported Sunday.

Greg Faranello at AmeriVet Securities said yields now might push up mortgage rates. Sam Lynton-Brown at BNP Paribas said stocks are holding up: “stocks and credit are fine with those high yields.” Reuters

Costco, Best Buy, and Dollar Tree are set to report, with investors tracking the impact of higher gasoline prices on consumers. Results from Salesforce and Dell are expected to shed more light on corporate tech budgets. Walmart’s cautious yearly guidance last week has kept some doubt around consumer strength.

Nvidia kept the AI trade moving, guiding for $91 billion in second-quarter revenue, topping forecasts. Edward Jones analyst Brock Weimer said the results backed up “robust AI-related spending trends.” Qualcomm jumped 12% Friday. Dell and HP also climbed after better revenue at Lenovo. Reuters

UBS Global Wealth Management lifted its S&P 500 target for 2026 to 7,900, up from 7,500, pointing to solid consumer spending and strong data center demand. UBS said that means about 6% upside from the previous close. Morgan Stanley is calling for 8,000 by year-end.

A hot PCE number, fresh oil worries or another yield spike could make a mild pullback worse. Reuters’ Morning Bid noted June could see more pressure on energy if the Strait of Hormuz keeps closed and fuel inventories drop. That would hit inflation nerves already in play for stocks.

Right now, strong profits and a market willing to overlook geopolitical risk are backing the rally. For Tuesday, investors have less cushion from earnings and will have to lean harder on the upcoming inflation data.

Stock Market Today

  • BRP (TSX:DOO) Lowers Price Targets Amid Tariff Pressures and Guidance Suspension
    May 24, 2026, 1:16 PM EDT. BRP's fair value estimate dropped nearly 17% to CA$97.22 due to new Section 232 tariffs and suspended fiscal 2027 guidance. Several analysts, including National Bank and Raymond James, downgraded shares citing tariff-related cost pressures and uncertain demand. Conversely, CIBC, Stifel and Wells Fargo retain positive ratings, emphasizing BRP's long-term growth potential and competitive positioning despite near-term headwinds. BRP projects 2027 revenues between CA$8.9 billion and CA$9.15 billion, with net income of CA$410 million to CA$480 million. The company recently repurchased 485,400 shares and declared a quarterly dividend of CA$0.25 per share. Investors should monitor tariff impacts and evolving guidance for BRP's outlook.

Latest articles

Wall Street’s 8-Week Rally Goes Into Memorial Day With Inflation in View

Wall Street’s 8-Week Rally Goes Into Memorial Day With Inflation in View

24 May 2026
The Dow closed Friday at a record 50,579.70, while the S&P 500 notched its eighth straight weekly gain. U.S. markets will be closed Monday for Memorial Day, with trading resuming Tuesday. April PCE inflation data, the Federal Reserve’s preferred gauge, is due Thursday at 8:30 a.m. EDT. Investors face a compressed week focused on inflation and late earnings reports.
Medline’s $2.7 Billion Stock Sale Just Put Its IPO Buzz Back on Trial

Medline’s $2.7 Billion Stock Sale Just Put Its IPO Buzz Back on Trial

24 May 2026
Medline Inc. shareholders upsized a secondary offering to 72.55 million Class A shares at $37 each, with no proceeds to the company; the deal closes May 28. The sale, coming less than six months after Medline’s IPO, follows a volatile week for the stock, which ended Friday at $37.01. U.S. markets are closed Monday for Memorial Day, delaying the full market reaction until Tuesday.
Tesla’s China Rally Fades; Monday Seen Testing AI Optimism

Tesla Faces Three-Day Pause, Eyes on Tuesday Move

24 May 2026
Tesla shares closed Friday at $426.01, up 1.95% for the day and 0.9% for the week, ahead of the Memorial Day market closure. The stock rebounded despite a new Model Y recall and questions over Elon Musk’s business interests, including SpaceX’s IPO filing. The Dow hit a record high, while the Nasdaq rose 0.19%. Tesla’s valuation remains tied to its AI and robotaxi ambitions.
Medline’s $2.7 Billion Stock Sale Just Put Its IPO Buzz Back on Trial
Previous Story

Medline’s $2.7 Billion Stock Sale Just Put Its IPO Buzz Back on Trial

Go toTop