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πΊπΈ U.S. Stocks – Weekly Wrap
Market Overview
For the week ended 20 Feb 2026, U.S. equities finished the holiday-shortened week higher, capped by a powerful Friday rally after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down the administration’s sweeping global tariffs imposed under IEEPA authority. Earlier in the week, rising tensions between the U.S. and Iran pushed oil prices higher and kept volatility elevated.
The Nasdaq Composite (COMP) led gains, rising 1.51% and snapping its recent losing streak. The S&P 500 (SPX) advanced 1.07%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJI) lagged but still added 0.25% as prior “old economy” leaders consolidated earlier gains. On Friday alone, the S&P 500 climbed about 0.7% to close near 6,910 as investors welcomed the removal of a major policy overhang.
Despite mixed economic data and firmer inflation readings, the resolution of tariff uncertainty provided a timely catalyst, helping markets look past recent volatility tied to AI disruption fears and moderating growth signals.
(Refer to the major indices’ weekly performance tables below.)
Major Indices – Weekly Performance
• Nasdaq Composite: +1.51% – strongest gainer, led by a rebound in technology.
• S&P 500: +1.07% – moved back toward recent highs.
• Dow Jones: +0.25% – lagged as industrials and value stocks digested earlier strength.
Key Highlights for the Week and Outlook
1️⃣ Supreme Court overturns global IEEPA tariffs
On 20 Feb, the Supreme Court ruled 6–3 that the administration exceeded its authority in imposing sweeping global tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA). The ruling removes a significant legal and policy overhang that had contributed to market volatility for more than a year.
Tariff revenues collected under the IEEPA framework are estimated at roughly USD 175 billion — around 0.6% of U.S. GDP. While the macro impact is limited, sector-level implications and corporate margin effects had weighed heavily on sentiment.
2️⃣ Administration responds with temporary tariffs
In response, the White House invoked Section 122 of the Trade Act of 1974, initially imposing a 10% global tariff for up to 150 days. Within 24 hours, this was raised to 15% — the maximum allowed under Section 122 — signalling an effort to maintain trade pressure while longer-term investigations under Sections 301 and 232 proceed.
Markets ultimately focused on the temporary and capped nature of these measures, which helped risk assets stabilise.
3️⃣ Fed minutes show division; inflation remains sticky
January FOMC minutes revealed a divided committee. Some policymakers remain open to rate cuts later in 2026 if inflation cools further, while others highlighted upside risks from tight labour conditions and persistent services inflation.
Core PCE readings around 0.3–0.4% month-on-month and roughly 3.0% year-on-year reinforce the Fed’s cautious stance. Headline PCE near 2.9% suggests easing is more likely around mid-year at the earliest.
4️⃣ Growth slows but remains consistent with soft landing
Q4 2025 real GDP slowed to the low-1% annualised range after a strong 4–5% pace in Q3. The deceleration reflected softer consumer spending, weaker exports, and slower government outlays.
However, forward-looking surveys remain in expansion territory, and corporate guidance broadly supports continued double-digit earnings growth in 2026. Current data align more with a soft landing than a sharp downturn.
5️⃣ Housing mixed; business confidence stabilises
Housing indicators were mixed. Builder sentiment and pending sales softened, while housing starts and permits surprised to the upside. Broader business confidence has stabilised, with improved clarity around tariffs and rates supporting capital expenditure plans.
S&P 500 Sectors in Focus
Seven of 11 sectors finished higher as the tariff ruling triggered a broad-based relief rally.
Outperformers:
• Communication Services (XLC) – strength in internet platforms and select AI-linked names.
• Industrials (XLI) – benefited from reduced trade war risk and solid manufacturing data.
• Financials (XLF) – supported by a slightly steeper yield curve and improved macro visibility.
Laggards:
• Consumer Staples (XLP) – underperformed as investors rotated out of defensives.
• Materials (XLB) – saw profit-taking in commodity-linked names.
• Health Care (XLV) – mixed performance amid stock-specific developments.
(Refer to the SPX sector ETF weekly performance table below.)
Technical Snapshot – Major U.S. Indices
• S&P 500 (SPX): Rebounded toward the top of its recent trading range, closing near 6,910 and not far from all-time highs. Friday’s strong move reinforces near-term support.
• Nasdaq Composite (COMP): Reclaimed key short-term moving averages but remains below early-year peaks as investors remain selective in high-multiple tech and AI names.
• Dow Jones (DJI): Consolidating just below 50,000 after reclaiming that psychological level, as value and industrial stocks digest prior gains.
π Weekly charts:
• DJI weekly chart
• SPX weekly chart
• Nasdaq weekly chart
π¨π³ China / ππ° Hong Kong Markets
Market Overview
Mainland markets were closed for Chinese New Year holidays beginning 16 February and will reopen on 24 February. Hong Kong operated a half-day session before closing for the holiday and resumed trading on Friday, with the Hang Seng Index slipping 0.58% in thin trade.
• CSI 300: (holiday closure)
• Shanghai Composite: (holiday closure)
• Hang Seng Index: −0.58%
Key Highlights – China & Hong Kong
1️⃣ IMF: Shift toward consumption essential
The IMF projects China’s economy to grow around 4.5% in 2026, below the 5% pace in 2025. It emphasised the need to transition from investment- and export-driven growth toward a more consumption-led model, supported by stronger domestic demand and structural reforms.
2️⃣ Telecom VAT increase
China raised VAT on telecommunications services from 6% to 9%, potentially weighing on major operators’ margins unless offset by pricing or cost adjustments.
3️⃣ U.S. military-linked list confusion
U.S. authorities briefly added major Chinese firms to a military-linked entity list before retracting the update. Adding names such as Alibaba Group, BYD, Baidu and TP Link Technologies before withdrawing the additions minutes later without a clear explanation. Alibaba and Baidu publicly rejected the designation and stressed that they are commercial, not military, companies. While largely symbolic, the episode highlights persistent geopolitical friction and headline risk for China-linked equities.
(Refer to the Hang Seng Index constituents’ weekly performance table below.)
π Weekly charts:
πΈπ¬ Singapore Market – Weekly Wrap
Market Overview
The Straits Times Index (STI) extended its winning streak to nine consecutive weeks, gaining about 1.6% and closing firmly above the psychological 5,000 level. Sustained buying in banks and blue-chip industrials continues to underpin momentum.
Market Leaders
Outperformers:
• YZJ Shipbuilding (BS6): +8.75% – strong rebound on robust order books.
• Genting Singapore (G13): +5.19% – supported by resilient tourism and gaming demand.
• OCBC (O39): +2.89% – strong capital ratios and dividend appeal.
Banks:
• DBS (D05): +1.63%-– recovered part of the
prior week’s pullback and remained a key driver of index levels.
• UOB (U11): +0.34%-posted a modest gain, reflecting steady earnings and asset‑quality trends.
• OCBC (O39): +2.89%– outperformed its local peers on the week, contributing significantly to the STI’s move above 5,000.
(Refer to the STI weekly performance table below.)
Technical Snapshot – STI
The STI remains in a strong primary uptrend, firmly above 5,000 after nine straight weekly advances. Short-term indicators are overbought, suggesting risk of consolidation. However, pullbacks toward breakout levels are likely to attract buyers focused on quality banks, industrials, and defensive yield plays.
π Weekly chart:
• STI weekly chart
Source: Some content and data are excerpted from publicly available market reports. Please comment to claim copyright ownership of any material, and it will be removed if necessary.
















