S&P 500 Scales New Record High Close With U.S.-China Trade Deal
The S&P 500 (Index: SPX) reached a new record high close on Friday, 27 June 2025, almost four months after it last set a new record. The index closed out the trading week at 6,173.10. The index rose 3.4% higher than it finished the preceding week.
The catalyst of the event was the announcement the U.S. and China had reached a trade deal during the week.
It could have been even bigger, but the news that the U.S. suspended trade deal talks with Canada knocked the index below its intraday trading high.
Even so, the S&P 500 muscled its way to a new record close. The latest update of the alternative futures chart finds that as the 2025-Q2 calendar quarter comes to an end, investors are focusing on the more distant future quarter of 2025-Q4 in setting stock prices, with the S&P 500's trajectory running in the lower portion of the forecast range for this quarter:
While the news of the trade deals capped off the week that was, they were far from the only market-moving headlines for the week. The positive outcome of the U.S.' attack on Iranian uranium enrichment facilities over the preceding weekend and the resulting cease fire between the Israel and Iran got the week off to strong start on the geopolitical front. In between that event and the trade-related news on Friday, much attention was given to what the Federal Reserve will be doing with U.S. interest rates in the second half of 2025. Here are the week's market moving headlines:
Monday, 23 June 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Pressure growing among Fed minions for rate cut:
- Bigger trouble developing in Eurozone:
- ECB minions say they'll only engage in bond buying in "exceptional" cases, really want a digital Euro:
- Shares advance, oil prices settle sharply lower as markets shrug off Iran conflict
Tuesday, 24 June 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions resisting cutting rates, bitterly cling to belief tariffs will cause inflation:
- Powell repeats rate cuts can wait as Fed studies tariff impacts
- Fed's Williams sees slower growth, higher inflation this year on tariffs, uncertainty
- Fed's Schmid says there is time to study tariff effects before rate cuts
- Fed's Collins says modestly restrictive monetary policy is necessary right now
- Fed's Barr: inflation to rise, may see some persistence
- Fed's Hammack sees no imminent need to cut interest rates
- Fed officials are starting to break rank and join Trump
- Exclusive: Fed should wait on rate cuts with price hikes expected, Bostic says
- Powell repeats rate cuts can wait as Fed studies tariff impacts
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minion still thinking about hiking Japan's interest rates some more as one inflation measure runs hot:
- ECB minions say they would do something if faced with a "material" change in Eurozone inflation expectations:
- Wall Street surged on Israel-Iran ceasefire, S&P 500 ends less than 1% away from record close
Wednesday, 25 June 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Outgoing chief Fed minion clings bitterly to belief tariffs will cause inflation, other minions to change rule to make it easier for government to borrow:
- Bigger stimulus, US trade deal developing in China:
- Wall Street ended mixed as Iran-Israel ceasefire seems to hold
Thursday, 26 June 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Oil rises as draw in US crude stocks signals firm demand
- US labor market softening as more people remain on unemployment rolls
- US demand for China-made goods ebbs on tariff worries; ocean shipping rates drop
- US durable goods orders soar in May on aircraft
- US goods trade deficit widens in May as exports fall
- US first-quarter GDP revised lower on tepid consumer spending
- Fed minions thinking maybe they should cut US interest rates, but not in July 2025:
- Bigger trouble developing in China:
- ECB minions using AI to improve their economic forecasts:
- Wall Street ended higher as the S&P 500 came up just shy of its all-time trading high
Friday, 27 June 2025
- Signs and portents for the U.S. economy:
- Fed minions plan to spend their summer waiting for data:
- Bigger trouble, stimulus developing in China:
- BOJ minions react to inflation data telling them to hike rates again by looking for other data that excuses them from hiking rates:
- ECB minions told they're chasing the wrong inflation target they claim to be on path to hitting:
- Wall Street ended in the green as the S&P 500 and Nasdaq notched a new record close
The CME Group's FedWatch Tool projects the Fed will continue holding the Federal Funds Rate in a target range of 4.25-4.50% until its 17 September (2025-Q3) meeting, when it is expected to cut the rate by a quarter percent. The FedWatch Tool now anticipates the Fed will keep cutting the FFR a quarter point at a time twice more after that first cut in 2025, on 29 October (2025-Q4) and 10 December (2025-Q4), before slowing to cut rates at 12-week intervals into mid-2026.
The Atlanta Fed's GDPNow tool projection of real GDP growth in the U.S. during the current quarter of 2025-Q2 fell to +2.9% from the +3.4% level recorded a week earlier.
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