Breadth 2026-06-15
The market is broadening out
The advance is broadening: the typical S&P 500 stock is up +7.6% this year and 63% of names are above their long-term trend, so the gains no longer depend on a handful of giants. Underneath, the leaders are changing hands: energy has started to slip, while tech, materials and industrials are quietly turning up. Broad participation like this tends to make a move more durable than a narrow, top-heavy one.
Indices 2026-06-15
The rally still belongs to the AI build-out
Measured from the market's low at the end of March, our four house baskets have pulled sharply apart. Rubin (our read on the AI build-out) leads, up +84%, while HALO (our broad-growth basket) trails at +6%. Euro-AI +34% and AW25 +21% sit in between. In plain terms, almost all the money that has come back into the market since spring has gone to the companies building out artificial intelligence rather than to the broad market — the same narrow leadership our breadth read keeps flagging. A move this concentrated usually has to broaden out or it wobbles; it rarely just keeps running on so few names.
Sectors 2026-06-15
Leadership is rotating out of the old winners
The groups that led this year are losing steam: energy has slipped below its short-term trend even though it remains above the long-term one — the first sign a leader is tiring. At the same time tech, materials, industrials, real estate, household staples, consumer names, healthcare and banks and financials now trade above their short, medium and long-term trends together, the look of money quietly moving in. When leadership changes hands like this, the next leg of the market often looks very different from the last one.
Breadth 2026-06-15
New highs are outpacing new lows
Across the S&P 500, 27 stocks are sitting at fresh one-year highs while 4 have just made new one-year lows. More names making new highs than new lows tells you the strength is reasonably broad — a healthier backdrop than a market carried by only its biggest stocks, and the kind of participation that tends to keep a move going. It is one of the simplest, oldest reads on whether a market move has the troops marching behind it.
Reads 2026-06-16
A Rotation, Not a Crisis
New on Worth a Read, our pick of outside writers worth your time — this one from Macrowise (Guillermo Valencia). Macrowise's Guillermo Valencia reads the selloff as capital rotating out of dollar-speculative bets and into the physical bottlenecks — energy, compute, robotics — the next technology cycle runs on. As always, we read the piece, sum up the idea in our own words and link straight to the original so you can judge it for yourself. We feature it for the thinking, not as our own call — one of several independent voices we follow on the markets and technology we cover.
Reads 2026-06-16
The Supply Shock Hiding in Sulphuric Acid
New on Worth a Read, our pick of outside writers worth your time — this one from Canary Compass (Dean Onyambu). Canary Compass's Dean Onyambu traces a simultaneous failure in three of the world's sulphuric-acid sources through five African exposures — fertiliser, food and copper — and reads it as structural. As always, we read the piece, sum up the idea in our own words and link straight to the original so you can judge it for yourself. We feature it for the thinking, not as our own call — one of several independent voices we follow on the markets and technology we cover.