News Bulletin
Tuesday, July 07, 2026
Evening Edition
Economic Numbers:
|
Time |
Event |
Actual |
Forecast |
Previous |
|
Tuesday, July 7, 2026 |
||||
|
8:14 |
ADP Employment Change Weekly |
24.30K |
|
30.80K |
|
8:15 |
ADP Employment Change Weekly |
21.00K |
|
24.30K |
|
8:30 |
Trade Balance (May) |
-77.60B |
-78.30B |
-54.60B |
|
8:30 |
Exports (May) |
317.70B |
|
328.20B |
|
8:30 |
Imports (May) |
395.30B |
|
382.80B |
|
13:00 |
3-Year Note Auction |
4.18% |
|
4.19% |
Indices
|
|
CLOSE |
50 DMA |
200 DMA |
|
DJIA |
52,925.15 |
50,697.91 |
48,513.43 |
|
NASDAQ |
25,818.69 |
25,968.31 |
23,739.13 |
|
S&P 500 |
7,503.85 |
7,423.34 |
6,959.91 |
Earnings Calendar:
(EPS: Earning Per Share / Rev: Revenue / Mkt Cap: market Capital/ BMO: Before Market Opening /AMC:
After Market Close)
|
COMPANY |
EPS Act |
EPS
Fore |
Rev
Act |
Rev
Fore |
Mkt Cap |
Time |
|
MSC Industrial DirectMSM:US |
|
1.21 |
|
1.02B |
$6.96B |
AM |
|
Enerpac Tool GroupATU:US |
|
0.53 |
|
166.35M |
$2.02B |
PM |
Market News:
Wall Street ended in the red on Tuesday,
weighed down by a slide in the technology sector as the artificial intelligence
trade took a hit from a post-earnings decline in South Korean giant Samsung
Electronics.
Also dragging sentiment was a rise in
oil prices as tensions escalated after reports of three tankers being attacked
in the last 24 hours in and around the Strait of Hormuz. Meanwhile, a key North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) event was in focus, where President Donald
Trump held a bilateral meeting with Türkiye President
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
The benchmark S&P 500 index shed
0.5% to close at 7,501.05 points, while the tech-heavy NASDAQ Composite slipped
1.2% to settle at 25,818.69 points, and the Nasdaq
100 finished 1.8% lower. The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average declined
0.3% to conclude at 52,924.56 points.
Samsung’s guidance fails to meet
sky-high expectations
The high-flying AI trade played a major
role in helping Wall Street shake off the Middle East conflict in April and May
and return to record levels.
However, with the U.S. and Iran signing
an interim peace agreement in mid-June and oil prices hitting pre-war levels
soon after, the geopolitical risk premium was effectively removed and investors
were able to refocus on drivers of the technology rally such as soaring chip
and memory stocks. A bout of profit-taking combined with concerns that the AI
trade had flown too high and too fast emerged over the second half of June.
On Tuesday, the spotlight was on
preliminary fiscal Q1 results and Q2 guidance from Samsung Electronics.
The company, which was already a smartphone and electronics manufacturing powerhouse, has
been a major beneficiary of the world’s biggest tech companies such as Nvidia pouring billions into building out computing
capacity for AI processes, leading to surging demand for High Bandwidth Memory
(HBM) and conventional Dynamic Random Access Memory (DRAM) products. The AI
boom swelled Samsung’s market capitalization into one of South Korea’s two
biggest firms, along with rival SK Hynix.
For Q2, Samsung sees consolidated
operating profit of about 89.4 trillion won ($59.01 billion) on consolidated
sales of around 171 trillion won. The profit figure in particular would be a
record for Samsung, and would represent a whopping 19-fold increase from a year
ago. But South Korean-listed shares of the tech giant closed nearly 7% lower
after the announcement, dragging down SK Hynix over
6% and the flagship KOSPI index almost 5%.
“The scale of earnings growth at Samsung
is jaw-dropping and a sign of the AI times. Second quarter operating profit
jumped 19-fold as it rode the surge in demand for chips. It’s the kind of
performance most companies can only dream of," Dan Coatsworth,
head of markets at AJ Bell, said.
"Unfortunately for Samsung, it just
wasn’t enough for investors. They had an inkling the results would be good
given everything that’s happened with memory chip prices this year, with
significant demand growth in a supply-constrained market making these
components incredibly valuable," he said.
Investors might have taken the view all
the good news is now in the price, and that it was
time to take some money off the table. Samsung’s shares slumped, dragging stock
market darling SK Hynix down with it. Investors are
increasingly showing nervousness at the pace of spending with AI and are
viewing the tech space with more caution,” Coatsworth
added.
At home, the Philadelphia Semiconductor
Index ended 4.7% lower, while the broader S&P 500 technology sector lost
1.6%. Memory and chip names dominated the percentage losers on the Nasdaq Composite, including Intel, Western Digital,
Marvell, and Sandisk.
Oil prices surge 5% as tensions flare up
Away from tech, geopolitical risks were
back on the table on Tuesday after the U.S. Treasury Department on revoked a
general license authorizing the sale of Iranian crude oil, in what was said to
be a response against Tehran following fresh attacks on ships in the Gulf.
The United Kingdom Maritime Trade
Operations (UKMTO) earlier said it had received reports about attacks on three
separate oil tankers over the past 24 hours in and around the critical Strait
of Hormuz. Two of those tankers were hit by unknown projectiles while the third
was truck by a drone, the UKMTO said, adding that
there were no casualties reported.
While Iran has not publicly said it was
responsible for the attacks, Axios reported that
Iran’s military had fired upon three commercial ships, citing U.S. officials.
Iran has previously said any vessels attempting to transit the strait must only
use routes approved by Tehran, and avoid a separate temporary shipping corridor
established by Oman and the International Maritime Organization.
Qatar identified one of the vessels
reported to the UKMTO as the Al-Rekayyat and
condemned the attack on the ship, saying it held Iran "fully legally
responsible." Meanwhile, Saudi Arabia identified one of the other vessels
as a Saudi tanker called the Vijian and likewise
condemned the attack.
The latest attacks threaten to further
destabilize relations between Washington and Tehran after both sides inked an
interim peace deal last month that ended fighting on all fronts and reopened
the strait. Tensions had already flared at the end of June when Iran’s military
attacked ships that prompted retaliatory airstrikes from the U.S. military.
Against this backdrop, oil prices spiked
on Tuesday, with Brent crude futures expiring in September, the global
benchmark, last up 5.2% to $75.76 a barrel. Prices on Monday had remained near
pre-war levels, and Brent last week notched its worst quarter since 2020.
Trump attends NATO event, is critical of
allies
Away from the Middle East, investors
were also keeping an eye on the NATO Summit Defense
Industry Forum taking place in Türkiye’s capital
Ankara. The organization issued several announcements, including a commitment
to invest $40 billion in counter-drone capabilities over the next five years,
new coproduction initiatives, and the procurement of up to five Triton aircraft
from Northrop Grumman.
The event was attended by President
Trump, who has earlier expressed his frustration at NATO for not helping the
U.S. in its campaign against Iran. He was again critical of the organization on
Tuesday at a bilateral appearance with Erdoğan,
saying that if it weren’t for the event being held in Türkiye
and his friendship with the country’s leader, he wouldn’t have attended.
"Well, we’re going to see,"
Trump told reporters when asked whether there could be further U.S. troop drawdowns in Europe.
"I was very disappointed with NATO
... we weren’t treated well, because we did something in Iran — we don’t need
anybody’s help, I didn’t even want their help — but before I asked they said
they wouldn’t be there," the U.S. president said.
He also addressed the possibility of
selling Lockheed Martin’s F-35 fighter jets to Türkiye,
despite the U.S. Congress in 2019 banning such a move over its acquisition of
the S-400 Russian air defense system. "It’s a
decision we are going to make...Turkey has been, in many ways, much more loyal
than other countries that we think would be loyal — so, yeah, it’s something
certainly we would consider," Trump said, adding that the U.S. would also
lift earlier sanctions imposed upon the country.
SpaceX joins Nasdaq 100, falls
almost 7%
Turning to Tuesday’s active movers, SpaceX officially joined the Nasdaq
100, but its first day in the tech-focused index ended on a negative note as
its class A shares fell nearly 7%.
The rocket company’s stock also saw a
wave of analyst rating initiations as the quiet period ended, with bullish
calls from major names such as Bank of America, Citi,
Deutsche Bank, and Goldman Sachs.
Elsewhere, Rivian
slumped over 18%, as its announcement of a share offering overshadowed strong
preliminary quarterly results.
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