Overview:
Markets reopen Monday June 22 after the Juneteenth holiday with the S&P 500 sitting at 7,500.58, a level that demands earnings validation. FedEx's June 23 report — consensus EPS $5.92, revenue $24.0 billion — will serve as an early read on global freight demand and corporate cost structures. Micron's June 24 print follows with the semiconductor sector's momentum on the line. May PCE data lands Thursday June 25 and is the week's single most important macro release for rate-sensitive positioning.
NEW YORK — The S&P 500 closed at 7,500.58 last Thursday, its highest print of the year, and then Wall Street went dark for Juneteenth — leaving traders with three days to decide whether that number means anything when earnings and inflation data start landing mid-week.
What Got Us Here — and Why 7,500 Is Now the Burden of Proof
The Nasdaq gained 1.91% on June 18, the last trading session before the long weekend, closing at 26,517.93. The Dow finished at 51,564.70. Those numbers reflect a market that has priced in a Fed on hold, a de-escalating Middle East, and a technology sector re-rating on AI infrastructure spending. Three weeks ago, none of those three assumptions looked secure. Now they are consensus — and consensus assumptions are precisely what earnings season exists to challenge.
The June FOMC meeting, which wrapped on June 17, produced updated economic projections but no rate move. The Federal Reserve’s dot plot left the market reading a higher-for-longer posture into year-end, yet equities shrugged and pushed higher anyway. That disconnect is not irrational — it reflects genuine confidence that corporate earnings will grow fast enough to justify current multiples even if cuts are delayed. That confidence gets tested this week.
For context on what drove the pre-holiday session, see our earlier analysis: Can Tech Carry This Rally Through a Long Juneteenth Weekend?
Earnings to Watch — The Two Reports That Define the Week
FedEx (FDX) — Tuesday, June 23, After Close
FedEx reports fiscal Q4 results after Tuesday’s close with Wall Street expecting EPS of $5.92 on revenue of approximately $24.0 billion, which would represent roughly 8% year-over-year growth. The headline EPS number is almost secondary. What the options market and serious freight watchers will focus on is yield-per-package in the Express segment, whether the ongoing cost-reduction program (DRIVE) is delivering margin expansion faster than volume softness is eating it, and — most critically — what management says about fiscal 2027 volume trends.
FedEx is a global macro instrument disguised as a logistics company. Its package volumes correlate tightly with industrial output, retail inventory cycles, and cross-border trade flows. Any commentary about softening Asia-Pacific export demand or domestic B2B deceleration will land harder than the EPS number itself. The stock has had a difficult 18 months relative to the broader market; a clean beat with raised guidance could trigger a meaningful re-rating. A miss, or cautious guidance, confirms the thesis that the goods economy is still under pressure even as services hold up.
Micron Technology (MU) — Wednesday, June 24, After Close
Micron’s fiscal Q3 report on Wednesday is the semiconductor event of the month. The DRAM and NAND cycle has turned sharply — AI server buildouts are consuming high-bandwidth memory at a pace that was difficult to model even six months ago. Consensus EPS estimates reflect the dramatic swing in profitability as pricing power has returned to suppliers. Revenue is expected to show substantial year-over-year growth as the memory pricing downcycle that punished the stock through 2023 continues to reverse.
Beyond the headline, traders should focus on HBM (high-bandwidth memory) shipment volumes and whether Micron is maintaining or gaining share against SK Hynix in supplying AI accelerator platforms. Guidance for the August quarter is the number that will move the stock. Intel’s recent gap-up set a constructive tone for the sector, but Micron’s report will either confirm that the AI memory trade has legs or expose it as having already run too far.
The Economic Calendar — Thursday Is the One That Counts
Monday, June 22: No major economic releases. The session reopens after Juneteenth. Expect positioning adjustments and potential catch-up moves on any weekend geopolitical developments. Volume will likely be lighter than a typical Monday as traders return from a three-day weekend. For a sense of what markets signaled during the dark session, see With Wall Street Dark, Where Are the 24/7 Markets Pointing?
Tuesday–Wednesday, June 23–24: Earnings-heavy. Economic data is secondary to FedEx (Tuesday after close) and Micron (Wednesday after close). Watch the bond market’s reaction to any Fed speaker commentary that may be scheduled — post-FOMC quiet periods typically expire roughly three weeks after a meeting, which means Fed officials may begin speaking publicly again this week.
Thursday, June 25 — May PCE (Personal Consumption Expenditures): The Bureau of Economic Analysis releases the May PCE and core PCE data Thursday morning. This is the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, and it matters more than CPI for understanding where the FOMC’s internal debate sits. The prior reading showed inflation still above the 2% target. A print that shows acceleration — even modest — hands the hawks a talking point headed into the July meeting. A print that shows continued disinflation strengthens the case for a September cut and gives the equity rally another leg. There is no consensus estimate available publicly at this time; the directional read relative to the prior month is what traders will trade.
The Fed’s own June projections, released after the June 16–17 FOMC meeting, have already set the bar. As we noted earlier this month, the labor market’s resilience has complicated the disinflation narrative by keeping services inflation stickier than models predicted.
Other Events — Options Expiry Has Passed, But Positioning Hasn’t Reset
The monthly standard options expiration occurred on Thursday, June 18 — moved up from the typical Friday because June 19 was the Juneteenth federal holiday. That expiry cleared a significant amount of open interest, but it also means the options market enters the new week with a relatively clean slate. Dealers are not sitting on large gamma hedges from the expiry cycle, which theoretically reduces the mechanical support that had been keeping realized volatility compressed heading into the long weekend.
That is actually a two-edged observation. Without large dealer gamma positions suppressing moves, the market is freer to move in either direction on catalyst surprises — including a hot PCE or a FedEx miss. Traders who are accustomed to the recent low-volatility grind higher should be aware that the post-expiry, post-holiday tape can exhibit wider daily ranges than the prior two weeks suggested.
On the central bank calendar outside the U.S.: the European Central Bank’s next Governing Council meeting is scheduled for late July, meaning no ECB decision this week. The ECB’s current posture — cautiously easing while watching U.S. inflation data — keeps the euro relatively range-bound against the dollar unless Thursday’s PCE delivers a significant surprise in either direction.
No additional FOMC meetings are scheduled for this week. Fed Chair Warsh’s recent communications have set expectations for a data-dependent summer; Thursday’s PCE will be the first major test of whether those expectations hold.
The Levels That Actually Matter This Week
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 Last Close | 7,500.58 | Bullish trend intact above 7,400; a close below that level on earnings disappointment would signal a near-term top |
| FedEx (FDX) Consensus EPS | $5.92 | Beat with raised FY27 guidance triggers industrial re-rating; miss on revenue or volume guidance signals goods demand is still soft |
| FedEx Revenue Consensus | $24.0B | 8% YoY growth baked in; anything below $23.5B with cautious guidance is a macro warning, not just a logistics one |
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | ~4.45% est. | Watch 4.55% as the line in the sand; a break above on hot PCE compresses equity multiples and pressures growth names |
| May PCE Release (Thu) | Jun 25 AM | Core reading above prior level = Fed hawks re-emerge; reading at or below prior = September cut odds rise, rally extends |
The Week in One Sentence — and the Risk Nobody Is Pricing
This is the week where the rally either finds a fundamental anchor or reveals itself as momentum running ahead of reality. FedEx on Tuesday and Micron on Wednesday deliver two very different reads on the economy — one on physical goods moving through the global supply chain, one on the silicon underpinning every AI infrastructure bet in the market. Thursday’s PCE then tells you whether the macro backdrop that allowed both of those companies to earn their current multiples is still intact.
The risk nobody is pricing correctly is the sequencing. A FedEx miss Tuesday night could pressure the broader tape Wednesday, right into Micron’s close. If Micron then delivers a strong print, the recovery will be fast — but the window of weakness between those two reports is real and potentially tradeable. Do not assume the week moves in a straight line in either direction.
The counterargument to the bull case is straightforward: the S&P 500 at 7,500 is pricing a near-perfect outcome across earnings, inflation, and Fed policy simultaneously. History suggests at least one of those variables disappoints. The question is whether the tape has enough momentum — and enough buyable dips — to absorb that disappointment without breaking the trend. For now, 7,400 is the line. Below that, the conversation changes.
For broader context on the geopolitical backdrop that shaped last week’s session, see Is the Iran Ceasefire Deal Already Priced In? and With Wall Street Dark, Where Is the Real Risk Building?
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.

