Weekly Market Recap

What Happened Last Week

  • Mag-7 Rebound: After lagging for much of the first half of the year, Mag-7 tech stocks rallied last week amid investor repositioning. 
  • Light Jobs Report: Last week’s jobs report showed slower-than-expected growth and helped ease rate-hike forecasts. 
  • Cooler Inflation in Europe: June inflation readings in Europe suggested that relief from lower energy prices is already underway.

What We’re Watching This Week

  • Rebalancing Flows: As the new quarter begins and ahead of earnings season, we are watching for further signs of changes in investor positioning. 
  • Monetary Policy: The minutes from last week’s Fed meeting will be released as investors navigate sparser Fed commentary. 
  • SpaceX Joins Nasdaq: SpaceX is expected to join the Nasdaq-100 early this week and may put pressure on other mega-cap tech names.

Investment Management Team’s Views

Investors aggressively rotated their positioning within the equity market during the otherwise quiet holiday-shortened trading week. After a blistering second-quarter rally, some of the market’s biggest winners finally became the source of funds. Semiconductors, memory, and other AI infrastructure names came under pressure as investors rotated toward areas that had lagged for much of the year, including several of the Magnificent Seven (Mag-7) stocks and international developed equities. While the move felt abrupt, we view it primarily as a positioning adjustment rather than a change in the fundamental outlook. Leadership had become increasingly concentrated, and periods of consolidation are healthy if the broader market is to participate in the next leg of the rally.

The macro backdrop became slightly more supportive after a lighter-than-expected jobs report and dovish-leaning Fedspeak. Chair Warsh’s comments following his first Fed meeting did little to reinforce fears of additional tightening, while softer inflation data in Europe and a mixed U.S. payrolls report encouraged investors to scale back expectations for further rate hikes. We continue to believe the Fed is likely to remain on hold through the remainder of the year, although the transition to new leadership may produce intermittent volatility in rates as markets adjust to a different communication style. The release of minutes from the Fed’s meeting last week is likely to be more closely watched than usual. Importantly, lower inflation expectations and resilient growth remain a constructive combination for risk assets.

Investors’ attention now turns squarely to earnings season. Markets have largely digested the latest geopolitical and monetary policy developments, leaving corporate fundamentals as the next major catalyst. Investors will be looking beyond headline results toward management commentary on AI spending, enterprise demand, and capital investment plans, particularly from the hyperscalers and semiconductor ecosystem. If earnings continue to validate the AI investment cycle while the broader economy remains resilient, the fundamental backdrop for equities should remain constructive. In that environment, recent rotations are likely to be remembered as healthy repositioning rather than the beginning of a more durable change in market leadership.

The commentary in this report is not a complete analysis of every material fact with respect to any company, industry, or security. The opinions expressed here are not investment recommendations, but rather opinions that reflect the judgment of Horizon as of the date of the report and are subject to change without notice. Forward-looking statements cannot be guaranteed. We do not intend and will not endeavor to provide notice if and when our opinions or actions change. This document does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any security or product and may not be relied upon in connection with the purchase or sale of any security or device. Mentions of specific securities are illustrative in nature. Before investing, an investor should consider his or her investment goals and risk comfort levels and consult with his or her investment adviser and tax professional.
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