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“Never do things others can do and will do, if there are things others cannot do or will not do.” – Amelia Earhart

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

To view yesterday’s CNBC interview from Closing Bell Overtime, click the image below.

US futures are little changed this morning as the S&P 500 looks to erase Tuesday’s modest losses. The major issue of the day will continue to be the Big Beautiful Bill and whether the House can pass the Senate’s version. A vote on that will be held either today or tomorrow, depending on when members can return to DC for the vote. Even when representatives return, passing the bill will be no easy task, as the slim Republican majority means Speaker Johnson can only afford a few no votes from his caucus. Betting against Johnson, however, hasn’t been a profitable strategy so far this year.

Overnight in Asia, equities were mixed with Japan falling just over 0.5% while Hong Kong rallied by a similar magnitude. The weakness in Japan stemmed from comments by President Trump, who expressed doubt that a deal with Japan would be reached by July 9th, in which case he could increase tariffs on the country to 35%.

The tone in Europe has been much more positive, with the STOXX 600 trading up about 0.5%. Unemployment in Europe ticked up to 6.3% which was higher than the 6.2% forecast, while Italy saw its jobless rate surge from 6.1% to 6.5%. That weakness should help to keep the ECB biased towards more easing.

In the US this morning, employment is also at the fore following this morning’s release of the ADP Employment report, which showed a 35K decline in payrolls in June, which was the first decline in over two years and well below the consensus forecast for growth of 95K. The ADP report has been consistently weaker than government data in recent months, and we’ll get the June Non-Farm Payrolls report tomorrow morning, but for now, this weakness lends to concerns over economic growth against a backdrop of uncertainty related to trade. With this report, you can practically hear President Trump’s fingers tapping out the next Truth Social post to Fed Chair Powell.

As we highlighted in the Chart of the Day, yesterday’s trading was all about rotation, where the best-performing areas of the market in Q2 lagged while the Q2 laggards outperformed. Another example of the rotation was in sector performance. The scatter chart below compares the performance of S&P 500 sectors during Q1 (x-axis) versus on 7/1 (y-axis).  Here, you can see the rotation from the Q2 haves to the Q2 have-nots.  The five worst-performing sectors of Q2 were the five best performers yesterday. Technology and Communication Services, easily the best-performing sectors of Q2, were the only two sectors to trade lower yesterday.  As Andy Warhol once said, everyone gets their 15 minutes of fame, and yesterday it was the Q2 laggards’ chance to grab the spotlight.