Global equity markets are showing increasing divergence as AI spending concerns weigh on tech stocks, while investors turn to key data including US payrolls, China PMI and RBA signals for direction.
United States (US) equity markets are set to finish the week mixed. The small-cap Russell 2000 and blue-chip Dow Jones are on track to finish higher, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 are heading for weekly losses, weighed down by the out-of-favour Magnificent Seven (Mag 7). This divergence has become one of the defining themes into the end of the first half (H1) of 2026. As things stand, the small-cap Russell 2000 is outperforming the Nasdaq 100, up around 21% year-to-date compared with roughly 17% for the tech-heavy index.
The shift reflects growing investor unease over the enormous artificial intelligence (AI)-related capital expenditure (capex) being undertaken by the biggest names and increasing uncertainty about when those investments will translate into earnings growth that justifies current valuations. With the US second quarter (Q2) earnings season now only three weeks away, the bar is set high; analysts are looking for around 22% earnings growth after a very strong 29% in the first quarter (Q1), a result which shot the lights out compared to the 9% expected.
Closer to home, the ASX 200 has had another challenging week and looks set to finish the week down around 0.85% near 8750ish. The local market has been pressured by a fresh round of profit warnings and weakness in key commodity prices, including iron ore, copper and gold, in reaction to last week’s hawkish Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. This has seen the heavyweight materials sector fall approximately 3.60% for the week. The information technology (IT) sector (-5.71% week-to-date (WTD)) and energy sector (-4.14%) have also fallen, adding to the malaise.
With only a few trading sessions left in June, the ASX 200 is poised to end H1 2026 with a disappointing gain, currently up just around 0.50%. The combination of Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) rate hikes, still-elevated inflation, the fallout from the Middle East conflict and recent federal budget tax changes has created a toxic backdrop for the Australian stock market. The accumulation index, which includes dividends, has performed somewhat better and is up around 2% for the year.
Date: Tuesday, 30 June at 11.30am AEST
Last month, China’s official NBS Manufacturing PMI slipped to 50.0 in May, down 0.3 points from April and sitting exactly at the 50 threshold that separates expansion from contraction.
The survey highlighted a widening K-shaped demand pattern with elevated oil prices weighing on the sector: consumption and export orders weakened noticeably, energy-intensive production softened, while high-end and high-tech manufacturing remained resilient, supported by the global AI capex super-cycle.
Tuesday’s June reading will offer an important early gauge of whether manufacturing momentum is stabilising or facing further headwinds given this two-speed demand dynamic, soft domestic consumption and lingering global uncertainties. Consensus expectations point to a modest rebound to 50.1.
A print in line with or above expectations would support the view that the sector is holding steady, while a reading at or below 50 would raise fresh questions about the durability of China’s recovery and the effectiveness of recent policy measures. With weak April and May data already pointing to rising downside pressures on Q2 GDP, policymakers are expected to re-accelerate the fiscal rollout from June, including targeted infrastructure support to prevent growth from slipping below 4.5%.
Date: Tuesday, 30 June at 11.30am AEST
The RBA held the cash rate steady at 4.35% at its June meeting in a unanimous decision, marking the first pause after three consecutive 25 basis points (bp) hikes earlier in the year. The Board noted that monetary policy is now well placed to respond to developments while continuing to emphasise that inflation remains too high. Notably, a rate hike was not discussed.
These minutes predate the release of this week’s CPI and labour force reports for May. The inflation update showed headline CPI cooling to 4.0% YoY, but the RBA’s preferred trimmed-mean measure rose to 3.6% from 3.4%. The May labour force report delivered a strong bounce-back, with employment rising +40,300 after April’s soft print. As such, the minutes will reflect the Board’s thinking based solely on information available at the time of the meeting.
This timing will give markets a clean read on how officials were balancing risks in mid-June. Any hawkish nuance in the minutes will heighten anticipation for the Q2 inflation report due on 29 July, which will provide the next major test of the disinflation process ahead of the RBA’s August Board meeting.
Date: Thursday, 2 July at 10.30pm AEST
Last month, US non-farm payrolls added 172,000 jobs in May, following an upwardly revised 179,000 gain in April and continuing to point to a resilient labour market. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%, while average hourly earnings rose 3.4% YoY, down from 3.6% the previous month.
After a run of stronger jobs reports and the hawkish tone at the 17 June FOMC meeting - where new Fed Chair Kevin Warsh struck a notably firm line on inflation risks and the need to maintain policy vigilance - Thursday’s June jobs report will be closely scrutinised for fresh evidence on the health of the labour market.
Consensus expectations point to a gain of around 115,000 jobs, with the unemployment rate forecast to hold steady at 4.3%. Warsh’s comments have placed extra weight on the data: a strong print could reinforce the case for tighter policy later this year, while a soft outcome would ease pressure on rate hike expectations.
The US interest rates market is pricing in a 30% (7 bp) chance of a Fed rate hike next month, with a full 25 bp Fed rate hike priced for October.
Date: Wednesday, 1 July at 7.00pm AEST
In May, Euro Area headline inflation rose to 3.2% YoY from 3.0% in April, surprising to the upside and marking the highest reading since September 2023. Core inflation, which excludes energy, food, alcohol and tobacco, jumped to 2.6% from 2.2%, remaining well above the European Central Bank’s (ECB) 2% target.
Following May’s warmer inflation numbers, the ECB responded by raising interest rates 25 bp earlier this month - its first increase since 2023 - as policymakers acted on their commitment to anchoring inflation at the 2% medium-term target.
The ECB also revised its inflation forecasts higher, now expecting headline inflation to reach 3.0% in 2026 and 2.3% in 2027. Core inflation forecasts were lifted to 2.5% for both years.
Next week’s June flash estimate will be scrutinised for any signs that the recent energy-driven uptick is broadening across the economy. Markets anticipate headline inflation will hold around 3.2%, with the core measure expected to remain firm near 2.6%.
The European rates market is currently fully priced for another 25 bp rate hike at the ECB’s December meeting. A hotter-than-expected core print may see this pulled forward into October or even September.
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