Overview:
Thursday June 25 is the week's fulcrum: PCE inflation at a forecast 4.1% annual rate and the third GDP estimate both land at 8:30 a.m. ET, arriving just one week after the Fed held rates and removed its easing bias. FedEx reports Tuesday after the bell with consensus at $5.96 EPS on $24 billion in revenue, with analysts flagging a potential 7.73% swing in either direction. The S&P 500 VIX at 16.78 suggests the options market is calm, but that calm may be complacent ahead of the most inflation-se
NEW YORK — The S&P 500 closed Friday at 7,500.58, riding an Iran ceasefire wave that sent the Nasdaq up nearly 2% in a single session — but the week ahead will test whether that optimism can survive a Thursday morning collision with the most politically charged inflation reading of the summer.
The Iran Tailwind and What It’s Actually Worth
Friday’s rally was built on relief, not fundamentals. The interim peace agreement between the U.S. and Iran eased fears about Strait of Hormuz disruptions and pushed energy volatility lower — a mechanical bid for rate-sensitive and growth-oriented equities that had been pinned under the weight of oil uncertainty. The Nasdaq’s 1.91% surge and the Russell 2000’s 2.12% gain tell the same story: risk appetite returned fast, and small-caps — historically the most rate-sensitive part of the market — led the move.
But relief rallies have a half-life. As we explored earlier this week, the ceasefire premium was already being debated before the formal agreement landed. Now that it’s in the price, the burden shifts to macro data to justify 7,500 on the S&P — or push it toward 7,620, the 52-week ceiling.
The VIX at 16.78 is the tell. A reading under 17 implies the options market is not hedging aggressively for Thursday. Either traders genuinely believe the PCE print will be benign, or — more likely — they haven’t fully recalibrated after the Fed’s removal of its easing bias at the June 16-17 FOMC meeting. The Fed’s hawkish pivot last week was unambiguous: with CPI running at 4.2% annually in May, the highest since April 2023, there is no near-term path to rate cuts.
The Earnings Setup: FedEx Is Doing Heavy Lifting This Week
Monday brings nothing of consequence on the earnings front. Tuesday changes that. FedEx reports Q4 earnings after the closing bell Tuesday, June 23, and this print carries more weight than a logistics company might typically command.
The Wall Street consensus sits at $5.96 EPS on $24.04 billion in revenue — a substantial year-over-year improvement from Q4 last year’s $4.89 EPS and $22.2 billion in revenue. That’s growth of roughly 22% on the bottom line if consensus holds. The volume context matters: 33 analysts cover the stock, with 17 Buy recommendations and only 1 Sell. The average price target is $408.81.
What to watch beyond EPS: revenue per package trends, international volume, and any commentary on fuel surcharge dynamics given the Iran-driven energy volatility of recent weeks. A FedEx beat on revenue with soft forward guidance would still be net negative — the stock’s freight volumes are a real-time read on global trade health.
Wednesday and Thursday bring a flood of 42 additional earnings reports combined, though specific names beyond FedEx remain the week’s outlier for market-moving potential. Traders should monitor the Wednesday and Thursday prints for any industrial or consumer-facing companies that could shift sector sentiment ahead of PCE.
Why Thursday Morning Is the Week’s Real Decision Point
The Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index for May lands Thursday, June 25, at 8:30 a.m. ET — alongside the third and final estimate of Q1 GDP. These two releases share a time slot, and the market reaction will depend on which number dominates the initial read.
Wells Fargo economists forecast headline PCE up 0.5% month-over-month, pushing the annual rate to 4.1% — driven by energy-related costs. Core PCE, which strips out food and energy and is the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, is expected to rise 0.3% month-over-month, with the annual rate at 3.4%. Neither number gives the Fed any cover. Both numbers, if they print at or above consensus, confirm that the June FOMC hold was correct and that rate cuts remain a 2027 conversation at the earliest.
The scenario that could actually move markets higher: a core PCE print of 0.2% or below would challenge the prevailing hawkish narrative and send rate-sensitive equities sharply higher. That’s not the base case — but it’s the trade that isn’t crowded right now. The Fed’s signaling has been unambiguous, and a downside inflation surprise would catch most positioning flat-footed.
GDP third estimate context: the first and second Q1 GDP estimates have already been absorbed. A significant revision in either direction would need to be large — think a full percentage point — to move markets independently of the PCE print sharing the same timestamp.
The International Calendar: PMIs, China, and an ECB Ghost Meeting
The week’s international events add texture without necessarily driving the U.S. tape — unless they surprise. Monday opens with a People’s Bank of China meeting and Canadian CPI data. Neither is expected to be market-moving for U.S. equities unless the PBoC signals an unexpected policy shift.
Tuesday’s Flash PMI readings from Germany, the Eurozone, the UK, and the United States — published by S&P Global — are worth watching for the manufacturing versus services divergence that has defined global growth in 2026. A continued contraction in German manufacturing PMI below 50 would reinforce the thesis that Europe’s industrial economy remains under pressure even as U.S. services hold up.
Wednesday brings Australian CPI data, Thursday adds Australian labor market figures and Japan’s CPI. The ECB General Council holds a virtual meeting Thursday, June 25 — though this body focuses on institutional coordination rather than monetary policy decisions. Don’t confuse it with a rate-setting meeting; it won’t move the euro or European equities.
Options context: the next standard monthly equity and ETF expiration is July 18, 2026. Last week’s expiry — moved to Thursday, June 18 due to the Juneteenth holiday — has cleared. Gamma positioning is therefore relatively clean heading into next week, which reduces the mechanical pinning effect that can mute intraday volatility around large strikes.
Where the Lines Are Drawn
The S&P 500 at 7,500 is not cheap. At 7,620 — the 52-week high — the index would need either a PCE downside surprise or a FedEx-led earnings acceleration to justify further multiple expansion in a 4%-plus inflation environment. The risk asymmetry entering this week favors protection over aggression for portfolios already at or near full equity weight.
Below 7,400 on the S&P — approximately 1.4% from Friday’s close — the peace trade thesis begins to crack technically. That level has served as near-term support through the Iran volatility period, and a break below it would signal that the ceasefire premium has fully reversed and that PCE concerns are dominating the tape.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 — 52-week high | 7,620.90 | Resistance ceiling; a close above requires either PCE downside surprise or strong earnings acceleration |
| S&P 500 — near-term support | ~7,400 | Break below signals peace-trade reversal; watch for acceleration lower if PCE prints hot |
| FedEx Q4 EPS consensus | $5.96 | Beat toward $6.13 Most Accurate Estimate = bullish; miss below $5.80 triggers expected 7.73% swing lower |
| PCE — headline annual forecast | 4.1% | At or above = confirms no Fed cuts; prints below 3.9% = rate-sensitive equities catch a bid |
| Core PCE — monthly forecast | +0.3% MoM | 0.2% or below = surprise dovish catalyst; 0.4%+ = Treasury selloff, growth stocks under pressure |
The week ahead is a genuine inflection point. The peace trade gave bulls a reason to push toward 7,500. FedEx gives them a reason to hold it Tuesday night. But Thursday morning is where the week is actually won or lost. A PCE print at 4.1% with core at 0.3% is the consensus — and a consensus print means the Fed stays frozen, the S&P consolidates, and the next catalyst has to come from somewhere else entirely. Traders who bought the Iran relief need to decide before Thursday whether they’re holding through the inflation gauntlet or taking gains while the tape is still green. There is no clean answer — only a clear risk to manage.
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.

