Wednesday, June 24, 2026
☀️ Somewhere in the Pacific right now, a sea turtle that hatched in 1962 is still just vibing, having outlived most of the cars that were built the same year.
June 24, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Hertz plummeted 27.3% on Wednesday, the single biggest loser in the S&P 500, as the rental car company faces oversupply and weakening travel demand amid higher interest rates. The collapse reflects how capital-intensive businesses with heavy debt loads become vulnerable when rates rise and demand falls—the company can't generate enough revenue to cover its higher financing costs. The stock's crash signals broader weakness in consumer discretionary spending and is a leading indicator that households are pulling back on travel as inflation and elevated borrowing costs squeeze budgets.
South Korea's KOSPI index crashed 10% on Tuesday, its worst day in over three months, as overseas investors fled chip stocks on regulatory concerns about overheated valuations. The selloff was triggered by signals that South Korean regulators viewed the semiconductor sector's rally as unsustainable, prompting a wave of profit-taking that spread globally: the Nasdaq fell 2.21%, the S&P 500 dropped 1.44%, and semiconductor stocks across the US and Europe collapsed, with Nvidia falling 4.2%, Broadcom 3.1%, Qualcomm 8%, AMD 5.8%, Micron 13.2%, and Sandisk 11.2%. The underlying concern is structural: investors are questioning whether hyperscalers' massive AI capex commitments will generate adequate returns, and South Korea's regulatory skepticism validated those doubts, reflecting a broader repricing of the AI trade as markets move from euphoria to skepticism about spending returns.
The Federal Reserve's June meeting marked a hawkish pivot under new Chair Kevin Warsh, with the dot plot showing 9 of 18 officials expecting at least one rate hike by year-end and the median year-end projection rising to 3.8%, up 40 basis points from March. Warsh removed prior language suggesting an easing bias from the post-meeting statement, a symbolic shift that markets interpreted as a commitment to price stability over growth, and the Fed raised its 2026 inflation projections to 3.6% headline and 3.3% core (up from 2.7% in March), citing supply shocks from the Middle East conflict. Markets are now pricing a 68% probability of a rate hike by October, up from 29% a week ago, and this hawkish repricing has driven Treasury yields higher (10Y at 4.49%), compressed equity valuations (Mag 7 down 11%), and strengthened the dollar (DXY +3.6% YTD).
The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz following US-Iran peace progress has triggered a dramatic collapse in oil prices, with WTI crude falling 4.53% to $70.89 on Wednesday, down 40% from its April peak of $113 as tanker traffic resumed and supply concerns eased. President Trump announced that Iran will impose no tolls or charges for commercial ships passing through the strait, and the US Treasury granted Tehran a 60-day license to sell oil on international markets, enabling hundreds of vessels to leave the Persian Gulf and the UAE to export oil at nearly 85% of pre-war levels. The oil collapse is deflationary for the global economy and removes a key inflation risk, though it creates a policy dilemma for the Fed: energy prices are falling, easing inflation pressures, but the Fed's June dot plot signaled rate hikes anyway, suggesting policymakers are focused on core inflation and labor market strength rather than energy shocks.
Micron Technology reports earnings after Wednesday's close, and the stakes could not be higher for the semiconductor sector. The memory chip giant is expected to post earnings of $20.83 per share on revenue of $35.75 billion, but the stock is coming off a brutal 13% collapse on Tuesday as South Korea's chip-heavy KOSPI crashed 10% on regulatory concerns about overheated valuations and slowing AI demand. The real issue: investors are questioning whether the trillions of dollars hyperscalers (Amazon, Google, Microsoft) are pouring into AI infrastructure will generate adequate returns, and SK Hynix's announcement that it's slowing production of advanced AI chips to boost commodity DRAM capacity signals that demand for compute may be cooling faster than expected. Micron's guidance will be the clearest signal yet on whether the AI capex cycle is sustainable or if we're entering a correction phase—a beat could spark a relief rally in semiconductors, while a miss or cautious guidance could extend the selloff into next week's FOMC meeting.
💡 Hyperscalers are the mega-cap cloud companies (Amazon AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure) that are investing hundreds of billions in AI data centers. Their capex decisions directly drive demand for memory chips (DRAM, NAND) that Micron manufactures, so if hyperscalers slow spending, Micron's revenue and margins compress.
S&P Global announced that Alphabet will join the Dow Jones Industrial Average before trading begins Monday, replacing Intel in the 30-stock benchmark. The move is a symbolic passing of the torch: Intel, which dominated the PC chip era, is being swapped for Alphabet, which is betting its future on AI and cloud infrastructure through Google Cloud and DeepMind. Alphabet's inclusion reflects the market's recognition that the company is no longer just a search and advertising business—it's now a core player in the AI infrastructure buildout—and the stock's 0.5% after-hours gain suggests the market views the inclusion positively, though the stock remains down 5% from recent highs as investors reassess AI spending returns.
💡 The Dow Jones Industrial Average is a price-weighted index of 30 large-cap US companies. Inclusion is a prestige signal and drives passive index fund buying, meaning every Dow-tracking fund must buy the stock, providing a technical bid.
SpaceX shares fell 1.61% to $153.60 on Wednesday, extending the volatility that has defined the stock's post-IPO trading since its debut as one of the largest initial public offerings on record. The aerospace and AI company has seen heavy trading volume and sharp intraday swings as investors struggle to price a company with limited financial disclosure and a business model tied to Elon Musk's vision for Mars colonization and satellite internet. The weakness on Wednesday reflects the broader risk-off sentiment hitting growth stocks and mega-cap tech, and SpaceX's elevated valuation relative to traditional aerospace peers suggests institutional investors are still building positions while retail traders test support levels.
A new Solana spot ETF launched Wednesday, marking a significant milestone in institutional crypto adoption and the first-ever staked crypto ETF in the US. The fund will stake 50% of its SOL holdings to earn rewards—a feature that differentiates it from passive Bitcoin and Ethereum spot ETFs—and Bloomberg Intelligence analysts estimate there's now a 95% chance that other SOL funds will follow, suggesting the SEC is opening the door to Solana institutional products. The launch comes as Solana has recovered from its 2023 collapse and is now ranked #7 by market cap at $40.2 billion, though SOL remains down 76.4% from its all-time high of $293.31.
💡 Staking is the proof-of-stake mechanism that Solana uses to process transactions and secure its network. Stakers earn new SOL tokens as rewards, so a staked ETF allows investors to gain Solana exposure while earning staking yields, making it more attractive than holding unstaked SOL.
Bitcoin fell 2.0% to $62,760 on Wednesday, extending losses as the cryptocurrency faces the same macro headwinds battering gold and emerging markets. The culprit: a stronger US dollar (DXY +0.37% to 101.50) and rising expectations for Fed rate hikes by October, which increase the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets—when real Treasury yields rise (10Y at 4.49% with inflation at 3.6% implies real yields near 0.9%), investors can earn a risk-free return by holding Treasuries, making speculative assets like Bitcoin less attractive. Ethereum fell 0.1% to $1,674.54, while Solana gained 0.50% to $69.22 as the broader crypto complex struggles with the same macro repricing that's hitting equities, with Bitcoin now down 49.8% YTD and Ethereum down 66.4% YTD.
💡 Real yields are nominal yields minus inflation expectations. When real yields rise, the opportunity cost of holding Bitcoin (which generates no yield) increases, making Bitcoin's volatility less attractive relative to risk-free Treasuries.
The reopening of the Strait of Hormuz following US-Iran peace progress has triggered a dramatic collapse in oil prices, with WTI crude falling 4.53% to $70.89 on Wednesday, down 40% from its April peak of $113 as tanker traffic resumed and supply concerns eased. President Trump announced that Iran will impose no tolls, insurance costs, or charges for commercial ships passing through the strait, and the US Treasury granted Tehran a 60-day license to sell oil on international markets, enabling the UAE to export oil at nearly 85% of pre-war levels and Iran to ship more than 30 million barrels over the past week. The oil collapse is deflationary for the global economy but creates a policy dilemma for the Fed: energy prices are falling, easing inflation pressures, but the Fed's June dot plot signaled rate hikes anyway, suggesting policymakers are focused on core inflation and labor market strength rather than energy shocks.
Hertz Global Holdings plummeted 27.3% on Wednesday, the single biggest loser in the S&P 500, as the rental car company grapples with fleet oversupply and weakening travel demand amid elevated interest rates. The stock's collapse is a microcosm of the consumer discretionary sector's struggles: higher interest rates have made car rentals more expensive for consumers, while corporate travel budgets are being squeezed by recession fears, and the rental car industry is particularly sensitive to economic cycles because it depends on both leisure travel (which declines in recessions) and business travel (which contracts when companies cut capex). Hertz's 27.3% plunge suggests the market is pricing in a significant slowdown in travel demand, a leading indicator of broader economic weakness, and the company's high leverage—rental car companies typically operate with significant debt to finance their fleets—becomes dangerous when demand falls and interest rates rise, forcing asset sales at distressed prices.