For the week of Jun 26, Global equity markets retreated into a risk-off posture for the week ending 27 June, as a sharp sell-off in technology shares reverberated across U.S. and Asian markets against a backdrop of elevated inflation, hawkish Fed signals, and mounting concern over stretched AI valuations. In the United States, the Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 fell meaningfully as large-cap technology stocks led the decline, while the Dow Jones held up in positive territory on defensive rotation into health care, utilities, and real estate. Chinese and Hong Kong markets suffered their worst weekly performance in recent months, with the Hang Seng Index plunging on broad-based selling that was most severe in internet platforms, consumer names, and solar stocks. Singapore's Straits Times Index was effectively flat for the week, as gains in aviation, transport, and S-REIT names were offset by weakness in offshore marine, property developers, and industrials.
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United States
Market Overview
U.S. equities posted a divergent week,
with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) eking out a gain of +0.60% even as
the S&P 500 (SPX) fell -1.95% and the Nasdaq Composite (COMP) dropped
-4.60%, marking one of the tech-heavy index's sharpest weekly declines of the
year. The selldown in large-cap technology and AI-related names drove the
underperformance, with sector ETF data pointing to Technology (XLK) as the
week's worst performer, while defensives including Health Care (XLV) and
Utilities (XLU) led the way higher — a clear rotation into safety amid rising
rate and valuation concerns. PCE inflation data for May, released during the
week, confirmed headline inflation at 4.1% year-over-year — the highest since
April 2023 — keeping the Fed's hawkish posture intact and reinforcing the
pressure on growth-oriented equity valuations.
(Refer to the major indices' weekly
performance tables below.)
Major Indices – Weekly Performance
· Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI): +0.6%
· S&P 500 (SPX): -1.95%
· Nasdaq Composite (COMP): -4.6%
Key Highlights and Outlook
1️⃣ Technology Leads Market Lower; AI
Valuations Under Scrutiny
Technology (XLK) fell -5.40% for the
week, the worst-performing S&P 500 sector by a significant margin, as
concerns over stretched AI valuations and slowing growth in mega-cap names
triggered broad selling. Magnificent 7 constituents bore the brunt of the
decline, and SpaceX shares are now down approximately 25% from their post-IPO
peak. The move reflects a growing market consensus that the AI-driven rally
from March to May has reached a point of valuation exhaustion.
2️⃣ Defensive Rotation Accelerates into
Health Care and Utilities
Health Care (XLV) surged +7.32%, the
week's clear sector leader, as investors rotated aggressively into defensives
amid the tech selloff and inflation uncertainty. Utilities (XLU) +3.22% and
Real Estate (XLRE) +3.15% also posted solid gains, a notable reversal from
recent weeks when rate sensitivity had weighed on these sectors. Consumer
Staples (XLP) +1.69% rounded out the defensive outperformers, confirming the
defensive character of the week's market movement.
3️⃣ PCE Inflation at Multi-Year High;
Fed Stays Hawkish
The Bureau of Economic Analysis
confirmed May PCE inflation at 4.1% year-over-year — the highest reading since
April 2023 — while core PCE held at 3.4%, also a multi-year high. Personal
income and consumer spending both rose 0.7% in May, ahead of estimates,
signalling continued household resilience. The data kept the Fed's hawkish
posture firmly intact, with half the FOMC having pencilled in further rate
hikes at their June meeting; falling oil prices provide some offset but are
unlikely to shift the committee's near-term stance.
4️⃣ GDP Revised Up; Business Activity
Improves
First-quarter real GDP growth was
revised up to 2.1% annualised from 1.6%, driven by a downward revision to
imports. The S&P Global Flash Composite PMI rose to 52.2 in June — a
five-month high — with manufacturing PMI reaching 55.7, its strongest since May
2022. Q2 GDP is tracking at approximately 2.5%, underpinned by robust household
and business spending, though employment softened for the second consecutive
month as firms focused on cost control amid elevated input prices.
5️⃣ Treasury Yields Slip as Oil Falls;
Dollar Hits 2026 High
U.S. Treasuries rallied as the 10-year
yield dipped below 4.40% for the first time in over a month, aided by falling
oil prices and roughly in-line PCE data. Investment-grade corporate bonds
gained alongside Treasuries, though high yield faced pressure from monetary
policy uncertainty, heavy new issuance, and risk-off positioning. Meanwhile,
the U.S. dollar hit a new 2026 high on the back of the Fed's hawkish June
pivot, weighing on commodity prices and international equity returns for
U.S.-dollar investors.
6️⃣ Oil Collapse Adds Disinflation
Tailwind Heading Into H2
WTI crude fell below $70 per barrel —
down nearly $25 from a month ago and over $40 from its 2026 peak — as the
U.S.–Iran interim peace agreement held and tanker traffic through the Strait of
Hormuz continued to recover. Energy prices, which added 1.5 percentage points
to May headline CPI, are expected to contribute materially less through the
summer months. Lower energy costs should support household real incomes and
consumer spending, providing an economic tailwind even as the Fed remains
cautious on the rate path.
S&P 500 Sectors in Focus
Health Care (XLV) was the week's
standout sector, rising +7.32% in a broad rotation into defensives as
technology valuations faced scrutiny, while Utilities (XLU) +3.22% and Real
Estate (XLRE) +3.15% also outperformed meaningfully. At the other end of the
spectrum, Technology (XLK) fell -5.40% as AI and mega-cap growth names came
under heavy selling pressure, with Communication Services (XLC) -2.99% also
declining on weakness in internet-related names.
Technical Snapshot
The S&P 500 (SPX) closed at
7,354.02, down -1.95% for the week and now at +7.43% year-to-date, with the
index pulling back from recent highs as technology sector weakness eroded the
broader market's gains.
π Weekly charts:
- DJI
weekly chart
- SPX
weekly chart
- Nasdaq
weekly chart
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China / Hong Kong
Market Overview
Chinese and Hong Kong equities suffered
a sharply negative week, as the global technology sell-off combined with
domestic demand concerns and sector-specific pressures drove broad-based
declines. The Shanghai Composite (SSE) declined -1.55% to close at 4,027.26,
while the Hang Seng Index (HSI) fell -5.24% to 22,671.86 — one of its worst
weekly performances in recent months — with the index now down -11.54%
year-to-date. Internet platforms, solar names, and consumer discretionary
stocks led the HSI lower, with the index's heavy weighting in these sectors
amplifying the global technology risk-off move; the divergence from mainland
benchmarks continued to reflect the HSI's concentrated exposure to names facing
both domestic demand headwinds and global growth repricing.
Index Weekly Performance
·
CSI 300: -1.48%
· Shanghai Composite Index (SSE): -1.55%
· Hang Seng Index(HSI): -5.24%
Key Highlights and outlook
1️⃣ Hang Seng Plunges; Internet and
Solar Names Hardest Hit
The HSI's -5.24% decline was driven by
broad-based selling across its largest constituents, with internet platforms
suffering particularly severe losses: Alibaba fell -14.68%, Sunny Optical
plunged -24.02%, Tencent declined -6.45%, and JD.com dropped -11.85%. Solar
names were also deeply negative, with Xinyi Solar -14.89% and Zijin Mining
-14.40%. The scale of declines across the index reflects a confluence of global
risk-off sentiment, domestic demand disappointment, and sector-specific
valuation resets.
2️⃣ PBOC Holds LPRs; New Liquidity
Framework Under Watch
The People's Bank of China left the
one-year and five-year Loan Prime Rates (LPRs) unchanged at 3.00% and 3.50%
respectively — steady for 13 consecutive months — reinforcing its deliberate,
targeted approach to easing. Separately, the PBOC announced plans to launch
overnight reverse repo operations under a new liquidity management framework,
following Governor Pan Gongsheng's Lujiazui Forum remarks. Market participants
will closely watch the inaugural operation's rate and take-up for signals on
the evolution of monetary policy transmission.
3️⃣ Exports Strong but Domestic Demand
Remains the Weak Link
May exports rose 19.4% year-on-year —
well ahead of expectations — providing a key cushion to growth, but the
domestic demand picture remains challenging. Retail sales fell 0.6% YoY in May
after barely positive readings in prior months, while property investment
declined 16.2% YoY. Combined with fiscal underspending and sluggish fixed-asset
investment momentum, the data reinforces the case for more targeted policy
support in the second half of 2026, with the July Politburo meeting a key
catalyst to watch.
4️⃣ Politburo Meeting in Focus; Policy
Pivot Seen as Incremental
The upcoming July Politburo meeting
remains the key near-term catalyst, with the market watching for more
supportive rhetoric on consumption, project acceleration, and property
stabilisation. Sell-side conviction names — AIA, Alibaba, COLI, and Tencent —
retain their positioning as key beneficiaries of any such policy shift, given
their leverage to household confidence recovery and broader risk sentiment.
However, consensus expectation is for measures to remain targeted and
incremental, as resilient export performance reduces urgency for a broad-based
stimulus pivot.
Technical Snapshot
The Hang Seng Index closed at 22,671.86, down -5.24% for the
week and now -11.54% year-to-date, breaking below recent support levels in a
move accompanied by broad constituent selling that left few defensive havens
within the index.
(Refer to the Hang Seng Index
constituents’ weekly performance table below.)
- SSE
weekly chart
- HSI
weekly chart
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Singapore
Market Overview
The Straits Times Index (STI) closed the
week essentially unchanged at 5,191.73, down just -0.02%, preserving the bulk
of the prior week's strong +3.32% advance and holding its year-to-date gain at
+11.74%. The near-flat close masked significant dispersion beneath the surface,
with aviation names — led by SIA (C6L) +5.08% — and defensive S-REIT and staple
names posting solid gains, while offshore marine names, property developers,
and select industrials gave back ground. Singapore's relative resilience against
sharply negative regional peers underscored the market's defensive
characteristics and its reduced direct exposure to the technology and internet
sectors that drove losses in the U.S. and Hong Kong.
Index Weekly Performance
· Straits Times Index (STI): -0.02%
Key Highlights and Outlook
1️⃣ SIA Leads Gains as Aviation Demand
Outlook Holds
Singapore Airlines (C6L) rose +5.08% to
close at 7.65, now up +19.53% year-to-date, as continued recovery in air travel
demand and the positive margin impact of lower jet fuel costs from falling oil
prices drove renewed buying interest. SATS (S58) added +2.75%, extending its
run to +17.85% year-to-date, as improving passenger volumes supported the
ground handler's recovery trajectory. Aviation-related names provided the
week's clearest positive contribution to the STI.
2️⃣ S-REITs Recover as Rate Outlook
Stabilises
Several S-REIT names posted positive
returns for the week, with Mapletree Pan Asia Commercial Trust (N2IU) +2.36%,
Frasers Centrepoint Trust (J69U) +2.23%, and CapLand IntCom Trust (C38U) +2.13%
all advancing, while CapitaLand Ascendas REIT (A17U) gained +1.20%. The
recovery in rate-sensitive names reflects the modest easing in U.S. Treasury
yields during the week, with investors reassessing distribution growth
prospects as the inflation and rate outlook stabilised marginally.
3️⃣ Banks Modestly Mixed; DBS Slips on
Profit-Taking
Singapore's three banks posted a mixed
week, with UOB (U11) gaining +1.40% and OCBC (O39) edging up +0.93%, while DBS
(D05) dipped -0.80% — likely reflecting some profit-taking after the prior
week's strong advance. All three banks remain comfortably positive on a
year-to-date basis, with DBS +16.09% and OCBC +25.81%, supported by healthy NIM
levels, robust dividend yields, and solid NPL management. NIM trajectory into
year-end remains the key watch variable for the sector.
(Refer to the STI weekly performance table below.)
π Weekly chart:
- STI
weekly chart
Source:
Some content and data are excerpted from publicly available market reports.











