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Senate approves its version of reconciliation bill in 51-50 vote; VP Vance casts tiebreaker vote Reports of potential narrower trade deals ahead of July 9 deadline Some rotation away from mega-cap stocks and into broader market; small-cap and mid-cap stocks outperform, as do value stocks |
[BRIEFING.COM] Today was the first trading day of the third quarter, and it belonged to the broader market. Small-cap stocks, mid-cap stocks, value stocks, and the "other 493" stocks in the S&P 500 assumed a leadership position, while many of the mega-cap stocks and growth stocks bowed out of today's gains.
The tape had vestiges of rebalancing activity within the stock market. Those efforts were helped along by some optimism about the growth outlook that stemmed from the JOLTS Report showing a sizable increase in job openings in May, the ISM Manufacturing Index showing a slower pace of contraction in June, and the Senate passing its version of the "One Big, Beautiful Bill" in a 51-50 vote that came courtesy of Vice President Vance casting the tiebreaking vote.
This bill has been passed back to the House, which will begin debate at 9:00 a.m. ET on Wednesday, according to House Majority Whip Emmer. A vote will occur after that debate ends, setting up the possibility that the president could have the bill on his desk for signing by July 4.
The Treasury market took in these developments and others with some reservations, thinking they might at least forestall a rate cut in July. The other developments included an observation from Fed Chair Powell at an ECB Forum on Central Banking that the Fed would have likely cut rates already if not for the size of the tariffs that were announced and a Bloomberg TV report that the president isn't thinking about extending the tariff pause past July 9. There were also rumblings from the president that the U.S. isn't likely to make a deal with Japan.
The 2-yr note yield jumped five basis points to 3.77%, while the 10-yr note yield rose only two basis points to 4.25% in a curve-flattening trade.
Today's rebalancing effort in the stock market manifested itself in the outperformance of the equal-weighted S&P 500 (+1.2%) versus the market cap-weighted S&P 500 (-0.1%), which was pressured by losses in Tesla (TSLA 300.71, -16.95, -5.34%), NVIDIA (NVDA 153.29, -4.70, -2.97%), Meta Platforms (META 719.22, -18.87, -2.56%), Microsoft (MSFT 492.05, -5.36, -1.08%), and Alphabet (GOOG 176.91, -0.48, -0.27%).
Tesla's poor showing was exacerbated by concerns over Elon Musk's strong objections to the passage of the "One Big, Beautiful Bill" and the president suggesting that the government might need to look at cutting subsidies for his companies.
The problems for Tesla did not derail the S&P 500 consumer discretionary sector (+0.2%), which was bolstered by the gain in Amazon (AMZN 220.46, +1.07, +0.49%) and strong gains among the casino stocks after an encouraging gross revenue report out of Macau for the month of June.
Today's best-performing sectors were the materials (+2.3%), health care (+1.4%), energy (+0.8%), and consumer staples (+0.8%) sectors. The only two sectors losing ground were communication services (-1.2%) and information technology (-1.1%). The latter would have been down more if not for the strength shown by Apple (AAPL 207.82, +2.65, +1.29%).
Breadth figures conveyed the broad-based buying interest under the index surface. Advancers led decliners by a 3-to-1 margin at the NYSE and by a roughly 5-to-4 margin at the Nasdaq.
Reviewing today's data:
[BRIEFING.COM] It is a new quarter, but the market's buy-the-dip inclination has remained intact. Shortly after the top of the hour, Bloomberg TV reported that the president isn't thinking about extending the tariff pause past July 9 and that he doubts the U.S. will make a deal with Japan. The president added that Japan could pay "30%, 35%, or whatever tariff we determine."
The market hit an air pocket when those headlines hit but wasted little time getting back on track and returning to levels seen just before those headlines hit. Arguably, it clung to its belief that this tough-sounding rhetoric from the president might simply be a negotiating tactic and that, ultimately, a worst-case scenario will be avoided.
Time will tell if that is the case, but with the closing bell less than 30 minutes away, the market cap-weighted S&P 500 is little changed and much closer to its high for the session (6,210.78) than it is to its low (6,177.97).
[BRIEFING.COM] The mega-cap stocks dominated the price action in the recovery from the April 7 lows, but the start of the third quarter has seen a rotation away from several stocks in the space and into other parts of the market that trailed those names during the second quarter.
Accordingly, today's upside leaders are found in the small-cap stocks and mid-cap stocks, as well as the "other 493 stocks" in the S&P 500, evidenced by the 1.3% gain in the equal-weighted S&P 500.
The market cap-weighted S&P 500 is down 0.2%, pressured by losses in the likes of Tesla (TSLA 300.71, -16.95, -5.34%), NVIDIA (NVDA 153.19, -4.80, -3.04%), Meta Platforms (META 716.82, -21.27, -2.88%), Microsoft (MSFT 491.67, -5.74, -1.15%), and Alphabet (GOOG 175.87, -1.52, -0.86%).
Elsewhere, the value factor is outperforming the growth factor today. The Russell 3000 Value Index is up 1.1% versus a 0.8% decline for the Russell 3000 Growth Index.
[BRIEFING.COM] The S&P 500 (-0.04%) is in second place on Tuesday afternoon, down just 2 points.
Briefly, S&P 500 constituents Builders FirstSource (BLDR 127.34, +10.65, +9.13%), Las Vegas Sands (LVS 47.32, +3.81, +8.76%), and Packaging Corp. (PKG 202.73, +14.28, +7.58%) pepper the top of the standings. LVS jumps on Macau gaming data, while PKG outperforms after announcing a $1.8B all-cash acquisition of Greif's (GEF 69.33, +4.34, +6.68%) containerboard business, a deal seen as strategically additive and immediately accretive to earnings.
Meanwhile, Williams Cos (WMB 59.11, -3.70, -5.89%) is underperforming, slipping a bit as nat gas futures also display weakness.
[BRIEFING.COM] The Nasdaq Composite (-0.53%) is in last place on Tuesday afternoon.
Gold futures settled $42.10 higher (+1.3%) at $3,349.80/oz, amid a softening dollar and growing macro uncertainty. Looming trade policy risk tied to President Trump's impending July 9 tariff deadline, up to 50% tariffs on China and other countries, continues to feed safe-haven demand. Additionally, markets are pricing in potential Fed rate cuts later this year, fueled partly by political pressure from the White House to ease policy, further lifting gold as a classic hedge.
Meanwhile, the U.S. Dollar Index is little changed at $96.82.