MARKET INSIGHTS

Weekly market commentary

Strong earnings key as rates stay high

Market take

Weekly video_20260615

Ehsan Khoman

Economist

BlackRock Investment Institute

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CAPITAL AT RISK. MARKETING MATERIAL.

Opening frame: What’s driving markets? Market take

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Title slide: Strong earnings key as rates stay high

The recent equity pullback has put a central market debate back into focus: can solid earnings growth offset a higher-for-longer interest rate backdrop?

1: Tech stands out

Tech looks like one of the few parts of the market capable of outrunning pressure from higher interest rates. That’s thanks to rising earnings expectations for the sector, strengthening AI capital spending and broader conviction in the AI theme. Those factors have helped offset the would-be drag from higher rates.

But whether the sector can continue to stand out depends not only on earnings growth delivering but also on investor willingness to fund the next phase of the AI buildout.

2: Competing for capital

To be sure, tech is still gathering momentum. OpenAI’s IPO filing and SpaceX’s public market debut last week highlights sustained investor appetite for AI-related assets.

But a larger pipeline of IPOs, equity issuance and financing needs competing for limited capital highlights an important reality for markets: the same forces supporting earnings growth – namely accelerating capital spending on the AI buildout – are also helping keep rates elevated.

3: Rates in focus

The challenge for investors is that earnings growth and interest rates are rising at the same time. A solid labor market and persistent inflation pressures have led investors to scale back expectations for policy. The Middle East conflict shock only added to those concerns by raising questions about the inflation outlook.

This puts the spotlight on Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh’s first policy meeting as head of the central bank this week. What’s key is the communication surrounding the meeting itself, and we’re closely watching whether the Fed will reduce reliance on forward guidance. That could potentially make the Fed’s reactions a source of volatility, while also lifting term premia and keeping upward pressure on long-term yields.

Outro: Here’s our Market take

We think it’s key for investors to focus on which assets can thrive in a higher-for-longer interest rates environment. We stay pro-risk on the accelerating AI theme.

Closing frame: Read details: blackrock.com/weekly-commentary

Growth v. rates

Markets are still digesting the trade-off between stronger earnings growth and higher interest rates. Solid tech earnings keep us positive on risk, for now.

Market backdrop

The S&P 500 gained 1% as tech rebounded and on news that the U.S. and Iran were nearing a potential peace deal. Brent crude oil fell to a three-month low.

Week ahead

Eyes are on Kevin Warsh's first meeting as Fed chair and any communication changes, including whether the Fed will still provide forward guidance on rates.

The recent equity pullback has put a central debate back into focus: can solid U.S. corporate earnings growth keep offsetting a higher-for-longer interest rate environment? Equities have remained relatively resilient as bond yields jumped to one-year highs on inflation concerns as markets shifted to price in a potential Federal Reserve rate hike. The latest tech retreat suggests the balance between earnings growth and rates is a fine one – and earnings need to keep delivering.

Download full commentary (PDF)

Earnings growth vs. rates
Change in 2026 U.S. expected earnings growth and short-term rate path

This chart shows the potential drag from a higher policy rate path on a permanent shift higher (yellow dots) and temporary one (gray dots) that fades after five years. U.S. tech earnings this year have so far outpaced that potential drag.

Source: BlackRock Investment Institute with data from LSEG Datastream, June 2026. Notes: Dots show the earnings growth needed to offset the change in valuations associated with shifts in policy rate expectations. Temporary shocks are assumed to gradually fade and be fully reversed after five years. Earnings above the curve offset valuation pressure from higher rates, while earnings below the curve imply residual valuation pressure. Diamond markers show year-to-date changes in earnings expectations for the MSCI U.S. and MSCI U.S. IT indices assuming a 60-basis-point increase in policy rate expectations.

Tech has proved a corner of the stock market able to outrun persistent pressure stemming from higher interest rates. See the chart. This reflects the strength of the forces driving earnings growth, in our view: strengthening AI investment spending and broader conviction in the AI theme. The chart shows the potential drag from a higher policy rate path on a permanent shift higher (yellow dots) and temporary one (gray dots) that fades after five years. U.S. tech earnings this year have so far outpaced that potential drag – and tech earnings have a higher hurdle to clear given their sensitivity to interest rates from the long-term nature of their earnings growth. See the orange dot. Whether tech shares can keep doing so will depend not only on the durability of earnings momentum, but also whether we see a further acceleration of the AI buildout amid the constraints.

The AI buildout has helped turbocharge U.S. tech sector earnings: growth jumped to a 52% year-over-year pace in Q1, easily beating expectations for a 36% gain at the start of the quarter and almost double the growth of the broader market, according to Blomberg data. The capital needs for the AI buildout are front and center after SpaceX’s record-beating $75 billion initial public offering (IPO) last week, the first of other big AI IPOs building in the pipeline. OpenAI's IPO filing just before SpaceX’s listing highlights sustained investor confidence in the AI theme. Yet a growing wave of equity-over-debt issuance from mega cap tech hyperscalers such as Meta and Google-parent Alphabet raises questions of where will the capital come from. We think market absorption of this supersized equity issuance is a real risk to watch but not on its own a reason to question the AI fundamentals.

Tech in the lead

This comes as U.S. growth has held up thanks to the ongoing AI buildout while inflation has proved sticky. The supply disruptions from the Middle East conflict have caused limited damage so far – just as a potential U.S.-Iran deal seems close again – but have reinforced concerns about inflation, prompting markets to price in a potential Fed rate hike this year compared with a few cuts at the start of the year.

This puts the spotlight on Fed Chair Kevin Warsh's first policy meeting as head of the central bank this week and the communication challenge the Fed faces. We’re closely watching how Warsh frames the balance between growth and inflation and any changes Warsh signals on Fed communication, such as reducing reliance on forward guidance to signal how it might act on policy rates next. That potentially makes the Fed’s policy changes a source of volatility as investors try to infer future moves from fewer clues – and could add to reasons for investors to demand more term premium for holding long-term bonds, keeping upward pressure on long-term yields. Any Warsh comments on AI-linked productivity gains will also be key – especially as productivity gains from AI signal a strong investment backdrop and competition for capital that would also push interest rates higher.

Our bottom line

Tech earnings are offsetting the pressure from higher interest rates. We stay nimble in how we implement the AI theme as the potential ways to express it evolve in different markets and regions.

Market backdrop

The S&P 500 advanced nearly 1% on a rebound in tech shares and hopes of a peace deal between the U.S. and Iran that also sent Brent crude oil prices to a three-month low. SpaceX’s record debut marked the first of several expected AI-related IPOs. U.S. 10-year Treasury yields pulled back to 4.48% as lower oil prices helped ease yields off a one-year high. Following the May CPI report, we think the data leaves very little wiggle room, if any, for the Fed heading into Warsh’s first meeting as chair.

All eyes are on next week’s Fed meeting and how Chair Kevin Warsh frames the outlook for growth, inflation and policy. Investors will be looking to see if the Fed drops its easing bias and for clues about how much forward guidance the Fed intends to provide given Warsh’s questions about its usefulness. Beyond the Fed, China credit data, a Bank of Japan policy meeting plus UK inflation data will help shape the global macro picture.

Week ahead

The chart shows that brent crude is the best-performing asset year-to-date, while bitcoin is the worst.

Past performance is not a reliable indicator of current or future results. Indexes are unmanaged and do not account for fees. It is not possible to invest directly in an index. Sources: BlackRock Investment Institute, with data from LSEG Datastream as of June 11, 2026. Notes: The two ends of the bars show the lowest and highest res at any point year to date, and the dots represent current year-to-date res. Emerging market (EM), high yield and global corporate investment grade (IG) res are denominated in U.S. dollars, and the rest in local currencies. Indexes or prices used are: spot Brent crude, ICE U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), spot gold, spot bitcoin, MSCI Emerging Markets Index, MSCI Europe Index, LSEG Datastream 10-year benchmark government bond index (U.S., Germany and Italy), Bloomberg Global High Yield Index, J.P. Morgan EMBI Index, Bloomberg Global Corporate Index and MSCI USA Index.

June 10-17

China total social financing

June 16

Bank of Japan policy decision

June 17

Fed policy decision; UK CPI and PPI; Japan trade

June 18

Bank of England policy decision; UK unemployment

Read our past weekly market commentaries here.

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Meet the authors
Jean Boivin
Head – BlackRock Investment Institute
Wei Li
Global Chief Investment Strategist – BlackRock Investment Institute
Ehsan Khoman
Economist — BlackRock Investment Institute
Michel Dilmanian
Portfolio Strategist – BlackRock Investment Institute