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THE MARKETS
Tech shares shrug off oil danger
Shares had been broadly up in Asia at this time, particularly within the tech-heavy South Korea market, because the Dutch semiconductor firm ASML reported better-than-expected quarterly outcomes and raised its steering. U.S. futures are up this morning after the federal government reported an unexpectedly tame inflation quantity yesterday. And the worth of oil declined, regardless of the worsening scenario within the Gulf.
- S&P 500 futures had been up 0.22% this morning. The index closed up 0.38% yesterday.
- In Europe, the Stoxx 600 was flat in early buying and selling and the U.Ok.’s FTSE 100 was down 0.11% earlier than lunch.
- Asia: South Korea’s KOSPI was up 6.24%. Japan’s Nikkei 225 was up 1.49%. India’s Nifty 50 was flat. China’s CSI 300 was down 0.20%.
- Brent crude was $85 per barrel this morning, down from a excessive of $87 yesterday.
- Bitcoin was at $64.6K.
Inflation report immediately takes Fed fee hikes off the desk
After the U.S. shopper worth index (CPI) got here in unexpectedly low at 3.5% yesterday, Wall Avenue grew to become virtually unanimous in its view that the Fed is not going to hike rates of interest this 12 months. Listed below are a few of their takes:
- “In the event you had been searching for runaway inflation on this report, you did not get it.”—Jamie Cox, managing accomplice at Harris Monetary Group.
- “It might be astonishing if the FOMC tightened coverage this month after this benign CPI report.”—Samuel Tombs of Pantheon Macroeconomics.
- “The extra probably plan of action is for the Fed to carry charges regular for a chronic interval, maybe till the summer time of subsequent 12 months.”—ING’s James Knightley.
- That is the report the Fed has been ready for.”—Jason Satisfaction, chief of funding technique & analysis at Glenmede.
What’s driving the S&P 500 proper now? One phrase: Capex.
“We’re in an funding cycle in contrast to something we have seen earlier than,” in accordance with Ohsung Kwon and his crew at Wells Fargo.

MORE FROM FORTUNE
A 12 months after founder Fred Smith’s loss of life, FedEx’s CEO charts his personal path – Alyson Shontell
Billionaire Richard Branson says copying his 5 a.m. morning routine gained’t make you profitable—and can simply trigger ‘extra burnouts than breakthroughs’ – Orianna Rosa Royle
The $124 trillion Nice Wealth Switch is extra than simply money: Extra U.S. companies are actually being inherited than purchased, BofA finds – Sasha Rogelberg
‘Near nearly as good because it will get’: Jamie Dimon simply provided one other warning on bubbly markets as Wall Avenue had a monster quarter – Mia Osmonbekov
Mitsubishi takes over $7.5 billion in U.S. pure gasoline fields from Aethon, deepening Japanese wager on LNG and the AI growth – Jordan Blum
An SEC e-mail handle mix-up is inflicting confusion and threatening to disrupt its proposal to scrap quarterly reporting necessities – Amanda Gerut
IRAN
Trump threatens to bomb Iran’s infrastructure
President Trump made new threats towards Iran yesterday, telling Fox Information, “Subsequent week it will get actually unhealthy for them,” Trump stated. “We will knock out all their energy crops. We will knock out all their bridges until they get to the desk and negotiate.”
Within the final 24 hours, U.S. forces hit dozens of targets on Iran’s Gulf coast. In response, Iran struck U.S. linked websites in Jordan, Kuwait, and Bahrain.
The hostilities got here after the president did a swift U-turn on his Monday risk to impose tolls of 20% on cargo transiting the Strait of Hormuz. As a substitute, he stated yesterday on social media, the U.S. will reimpose a blockade on Iranian ships, and demand “MASSIVE” commerce and funding offers within the U.S. from international delivery firms wanting to make use of the Strait.
The Strait of Hormuz is successfully closed, once more
Transport by way of the Strait fell to a two-month low, in accordance with Reuters. Not a single LNG tanker has made it by way of the strait since July 11, in accordance with Kpler, the ship-tracking agency.
Iran has managed to sneak some ships by way of the waterway, nonetheless. 9 of the 11 boats that made it by way of the strait previous to the reimposition of the U.S. blockade went through the Iran-approved course on the north aspect, Reuters stated. Three of them had been empty tankers coming into the Gulf. It’s turning into harder to trace delivery as captains flip off their transponders and go darkish in hopes of not turning into targets for Iranian drones.
U.S. forces escorted 800 ships by way of the Strait over the previous two months, The Wall Avenue Journal stated. Count on that fee to say no within the coming days.
The U.S. is utilizing up its weapons sooner than it’s changing them
The WSJ notes: “The U.S. is going through shortages of interceptors which are crucial for knocking out incoming Iranian missiles, making it dicier for Trump to stretch the clock.” Navy Watch Journal says the identical factor: It might take a 12 months of manufacturing to exchange the Patriot air protection missiles expended in the previous few months. However as a result of protection contractors are additionally dedicated to serving international purchasers, deliveries won’t truly occur for 4 or 5 years. “The scenario is significantly worse when assessing stockpiles of interceptors for the THAAD air defence system, Tomahawk cruise missiles, or GBU-57 bombs,” MWM says.
It’s day 138 of the struggle and nobody is aware of what the endgame is
Notably, the WSJ, the New York Instances, and the Monetary Instances all have heavy evaluation items on their entrance pages at this time, all saying roughly the identical factor: Observers cannot fathom Trump’s technique on Iran and may’t see a method out of the battle for the U.S.
Iran seems to have Trump in perpetual verify: The bombing has not labored so far; the Tehran regime stays in place; Iran has the power to shut the Strait anytime it desires; there is no such thing as a settlement on curbing Iran’s nuclear program; and the worth of gasoline within the U.S. stays a painpoint for People.
CHINA MAKES, THE WORLD TAKES
China’s export commerce can’t be stopped
If President Trump hoped to throw tacks onto the street in entrance of the Chinese language economic system, it didn’t work. China’s GDP was up 4.3% in Q2, which is taken into account disappointing over there however within the West could be regarded a blockbuster print.
China’s exports elevated 27% to a 53-month excessive in June, ING’s Lynn Track stated in a word. They had been up 19.4% the month earlier than. This chart reveals that after a quick hiatus brought on by Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs, China’s exports to the U.S. have already returned to constructive territory:

CHART OF THE DAY
What jobs do unlawful immigrants truly do?

Unauthorized immigrants make up practically 6% of the U.S. workforce, in accordance with Matthew Martin at Oxford Economics. “However their share of the workforce is no less than double the nationwide common in dozens of industries. The private-households subsector is by far essentially the most depending on undocumented labor; it consists of maids, nannies, private care aides, and outside staff resembling gardeners,” he stated in an e-mail to Fortune.
NUMBER OF THE DAY
22%
The consensus amongst analysts for year-on-year development in earnings per share among the many S&P 500 in Q2, in accordance with a word from Piper Sandler’s Michael Kantrowitz. In Q1, EPS development was 21%. Kantrowitz additionally seen that analysts have not too long ago develop into extra bullish of their expectations because the 12 months ticks by.
This chart reveals how, previously, analysts would begin the 12 months optimistic after which scale back their expectations because the months go by. Now, nonetheless, analysts transfer their estimates upward as we head towards December.

THE FRONT PAGES TODAY
Donald Trump’s return to struggle with Iran affords no clear path to victory – FT
Present and former workers sue Meta, alleging discrimination in utilizing AI to conduct layoffs – CNBC
Scoop: Trump tells Netanyahu to maneuver forces out of Syria and Lebanon – Axios
Why Excessive Credit score Card Delinquencies Aren’t Displaying Up on the Massive Banks – WSJ
ASML Raises Outlook, Plans Capability Hike as AI Boosts Demand – Bloomberg
How the Superwealthy Sidestep the Lots to Get to the World Cup – NYT
ONE MORE THING
Apple’s gossip about OpenAI is extraordinarily spicy
If you have not but paid consideration to Apple’s lawsuit towards OpenAI, through which the iPhone firm accuses Sam Altman’s folks of stealing its company secrets and techniques, now could be the time to deal with your self. Its allegations are explosive. Apple claims one in all its ex-employees, Chang Liu, joined OpenAI in January 2026 however did not return a work-issued laptop computer. He then exploited a bug in Apple’s safety software program to make use of that laptop computer to obtain dozens of Apple’s confidential hardware-related recordsdata. Apple additionally claims Liu used a former colleague’s Apple-issued work laptop to get into its company community.
Each of those acts, it ought to be famous, are textbook definitions of laptop hacking, which is against the law within the U.S. (Sips tea.) OpenAI didn’t reply to the allegations when reached by Fortune but it surely has stated elsewhere it “has no real interest in different firms’ commerce secrets and techniques.”
To be clear, Apple doesn’t particularly accuse anybody of breaking prison legislation in its go well with, though it does allege its info was “stolen.” That’s why Elon Musk was dragging Sam Altman on X the opposite day by suggesting the latter might solely go to Musk’s information facilities “in case your parole officer approves.”

