Overview:
May Producer Price Index data released Thursday showed final demand inflation running at 6.5% year-over-year, well above the 0.7% monthly consensus, locking in expectations for a Federal Reserve that cannot cut and may yet hike. The S&P 500 closed Thursday at 7,394.30 (+1.75%), lifted by Iran deal optimism and a tech surge led by Lam Research (+12.7%), Intel (+10%), and Micron (+11%). Friday's session pivots on the 10:00 AM ET Michigan Consumer Sentiment print — consensus 46.0 — alongside the Sp
NEW YORK — May wholesale inflation just printed at 6.5% year-over-year — the hottest reading since November 2022 — and the market’s response tells you everything you need to know about where trader psychology sits right now: equities ripped anyway.
What the Data Actually Showed
Thursday’s Bureau of Labor Statistics Producer Price Index release was unambiguous. Final demand PPI rose 1.1% in May on a seasonally adjusted basis, versus the 0.7% monthly gain economists surveyed by Dow Jones had penciled in. Strip out food and energy and core PPI came in at +0.4% for the month, a tick below the 0.5% consensus — a small mercy, but insufficient cover for the headline number.
On a 12-month basis, final demand inflation now stands at 6.5%. You have to go back to November 2022 — when the Fed was still in the middle of its most aggressive hiking cycle in four decades — to find a hotter reading. This is not ambient noise. This is a structural signal.
Paired with Tuesday’s CPI release showing headline consumer inflation at 4.2% year-over-year and core CPI running at 2.9%, the producer-to-consumer pipeline is pressurized. Goods inflation at the wholesale level historically transmits to the consumer side with a lag of two to four months. The 4.2% CPI print may not be the peak.
Today at 10:00 AM ET, the preliminary June University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index lands. Consensus sits at 46.0, a fractional improvement from May’s record low of 44.8 — itself a downward revision from the preliminary 48.2. Three straight months of declines have taken the index to territory not seen since the depths of the 2008 financial crisis. Whether 46.0 represents a genuine floor or a rounding error in a collapsing trend is the question traders will be answering in real time.
What Is Actually Driving This Tape
Thursday’s 1.75% S&P 500 gain — closing at 7,394.30 — did not happen because traders decided 6.5% wholesale inflation was bullish. It happened because President Trump told reporters a peace agreement with Iran could be signed as soon as this weekend in Europe. That single comment collapsed oil prices, eased the war premium embedded in energy and logistics costs, and gave equity desks a reason to hit the buy button before the weekend.
The 10-year Treasury yield dropped roughly 10 basis points on Thursday and now hovers near 4.47%. That move is almost entirely geopolitical, not data-driven. As Reuters noted, Trump’s Iran comments sparked the sharp fall in oil prices that gave bond traders room to breathe — temporarily. If a deal materializes, the disinflationary impulse from lower energy prices could be real. If it does not, yields re-price rapidly.
Meanwhile, Iran’s market impact has been building for weeks, and the geopolitical risk premium had been weighing on sentiment indexes just as much as domestic inflation data. A deal removes one variable from a heavily burdened equation — but only one.
The dollar index sits at 99.85, down 0.15%, reflecting both the Iran-related risk-on shift and the residual pressure from uncertainty about the Fed’s next move. VIX closed Thursday at 21.53, down 3.11% — still elevated by historical standards, still pricing tail risk that the geopolitical optimism alone cannot fully deflate.
The Semiconductor Surge and What It Is Not Telling You
Thursday’s tech tape was remarkable in isolation. Micron surged 11%. AMD added 8%. Lam Research gained 12.7%. Intel jumped over 10% following BofA’s upgrade on soaring CPU orders. The Nasdaq Composite finished up 2.54% — one of its strongest single-session performances in months.
The read-through here is AI infrastructure demand remains insulated from the consumer confidence collapse in a way that traditional cyclicals are not. Semiconductor capex is being driven by hyperscaler budgets, not by the American consumer’s willingness to spend. Those are two separate economies operating under the same index right now.
But this divergence has limits. If the Fed moves toward a rate hike — and fed funds futures now carry zero probability of a 2026 cut with hike bets building — the cost of capital re-prices across the board. Growth multiples compress. The AI trade is not immune to 5.5% or 6% Fed funds; it is merely better insulated than consumer discretionary names at the early stages of a tightening move.
For context on how the market has been navigating this inflation-versus-growth tension, Thursday’s PPI report raised a direct question about the Fed’s room to maneuver, and the semiconductor surge does not resolve it — it postpones it.
SpaceX begins trading Friday, priced at $135 per share, raising roughly $75 billion in what is expected to be the largest IPO in U.S. history, implying a market valuation of approximately $1.78 trillion. The gravitational pull of a listing this size will capture liquidity and attention. Whether it amplifies Friday’s risk-on tone or creates a vacuum that pulls capital from existing positions is an open question. The SpaceX debut arrives into a market already wrestling with 4.2% inflation — and now 6.5% wholesale price pressure on top of it.
What the Fed Sees From Here
The Federal Reserve’s position has moved from uncomfortable to untenable within the span of two data releases. CPI at 4.2%. PPI at 6.5% year-over-year. Core PCE — the Fed’s preferred gauge — is not out yet, but the pipeline data suggests it will not offer relief. The Fed meets next in late July, and the question has shifted from “will they cut?” to “when do they hike?”
Fed funds futures markets have fully priced out 2026 cuts. A small but growing contingent of rates traders is now pricing hike probability into the back half of the year. That is a structural regime change for equity valuations, and one that the Thursday rally has temporarily papered over with geopolitical optimism and IPO excitement.
The critical nuance: the Fed will not hike into a consumer confidence collapse without extraordinary care. Michigan Sentiment at 44.8 — a record low — alongside a labor market that has not yet broken gives the FOMC cover to hold rather than move. But hold is not cut, and the market spent much of 2025 pricing in cuts that never came. The question of whether 4.2% CPI is a ceiling or a floor has real implications for how long “hold” can remain the path of least resistance.
Levels That Will Define the Friday Session
S&P 500 futures point to an open near 7,287.67, roughly 107 points below Thursday’s close. That gap matters. Polymarket traders assigned an 83% probability to a higher open Friday morning — a figure driven almost entirely by Iran optimism and SpaceX IPO momentum. The Michigan Sentiment print at 10:00 AM ET is the one scheduled catalyst that could move that probability in either direction before the cash open fully establishes itself.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 Expected Open | 7,287.67 | Gap below Thursday’s 7,394 close; holds above here = Iran optimism intact |
| Michigan Sentiment Consensus | 46.0 | Miss below 43 = consumer deterioration accelerating; beat above 48 = short-covering in discretionary |
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | 4.47% | Break back above 4.55% re-prices equity multiples; hold below = geopolitical relief persists |
| SpaceX IPO Price | $135 | First-day pop above $160 = liquidity drain from existing positions; trades flat = healthy rotation signal |
| S&P 500 52-Week High | 7,620.90 | Distance from record high; reclaiming this level requires Iran deal confirmation plus sentiment stabilization |
Friday is not a simple session. Three overlapping catalysts — a sentiment data print that will test whether American consumers have found a floor, a historic IPO that will absorb capital and attention simultaneously, and a geopolitical deal that exists so far only in presidential commentary — are converging on a tape that has already sprinted 1.75% in a single session on top of wholesale inflation that, by any historical measure, has no business coexisting with a market trading near all-time highs.
The honest assessment: the S&P 500 sitting at 7,394 with PPI at 6.5%, CPI at 4.2%, fed funds cuts fully priced out, and consumer sentiment at record lows is a market that has chosen to believe in a soft landing that the data does not yet endorse. Iran deal optimism and SpaceX excitement are genuine short-term catalysts. They are not a fundamental rerating. If the Michigan print misses badly — say, below 43 — the market will have to make a choice between the geopolitical narrative and the domestic demand signal. History suggests that choice eventually resolves in the direction of the data. Whether Friday’s midday session holds its footing may tell us more about that choice than the opening print. Watch the 10-year at 4.47%. Watch SpaceX’s first trade. And watch whether Michigan sentiment confirms that the consumer, buried under 4.2% inflation and rising borrowing costs, has any fight left. The answers, by noon ET, will be measurable.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

