Week in Review: May 15, 2026

May 18, 2026

Recap & Commentary

The S&P 500 ended the week effectively unchanged while most other equity indices closed lower, pressured by higher yields stemming from “hotter” than expected inflation reports. Yields across the Treasury curve rose as investors grew increasingly concerned about the economic impacts of higher inflation. At the shorter end of the curve, the 2-year yield closed at 4.08%, its highest level in 14 months. The benchmark 10-year yield closed at 4.60%, its highest level in a year. And at the long end of the curve, the 30-year yield closed at 5.12%, its highest level since 2007.

Energy prices remained elevated as Middle East tensions showed no signs of abating, further exacerbating inflation concerns. On Thursday, Iran seized one vessel and sank another displaying its determination to keep the Straight of Hormuz closed. 

Higher inflation present a challenge for the Fed which entered the year expecting to cut rates at least twice in 2026. On Wednesday, Kevin Warsh was narrowly confirmed by the Senate, 54-45, marking the narrowest margin of confirmation ever for a Fed Chair. Warsh will take the reigns with the Fed facing considerable uncertainty. Fed funds futures ended the week pricing in a 50% change of a rate hike by year end and a 63% chance of a rate hike by January 2027. 

Through Friday, 91% of S&P 500 companies had reported earnings with 80%beating their consensus estimate. According to industry group FactSet, consolidated earnings growth is expected to be 27.7%, the highest level since 4Q21. The strong growth marks the 6th consecutive quarter of double-digit earnings growth, reinforcing the generally positive sentiment regarding corporate fundamentals.

Economic Commentary

Inflation readings dominated the week’s economic headlines, revealing continuedupward pressure from rising energy prices. On a headline basis, consumer inflation(CPI) rose 0.6% in April, driven by a 3.8% increase in energy prices, which accountedfor over 40% of the overall increase. Gasoline prices rose 5.4%. Compared to a yearago, headline CPI increased 3.8%, the largest increase since May 2023. Core CPI,excluding food and energy prices, rose 0.4% for the month and 2.8% from a yearago. The more modest annual increase in core CPI suggests that the impact of higherenergy prices remain relatively well contained, though economists continue to worryabout the secondary and tertiary impacts which may show up in the months ahead.

Producer prices (PPI) came in much stronger than expected as headline pricesjumped 1.4%, the largest monthly increase since March 2022. On an annual basis,headline PPI surged to 6.0%, the highest reading since December 2022. Increases incore PPI were more modest, up 1.0% for the month and 5.2% from a year ago butfar exceeded economists’ expectations. The elevated readings suggested continuedupward pressure on consumer prices in the coming months.

Despite higher prices, consumers continued to spend in April as retail sales increased0.5%. Core retail sales, used in the calculation of GDP, also rose 0.5% suggesting amodest positive contribution to 2Q26 GDP in April. Sales were likely aided by largertax refunds, helping to offset the pressure of higher energy prices.

Initial weekly jobless claims rose slightly, from 199K to 211K, but remained at a level suggesting little upward pressure on unemployment.

On Note

President Trump met with Chinese President Xi, where the two leaders discussed multiple topics including trade and the Middle East. Though specific details of their talks were scant, both sides appeared eager to prevent further trade tensions.

Market Indices (As of 05/08/2026)

S&P 500 0.1%
Small Caps -2.4%
Intl. Developed -1.7%
Intl. Emerging -2.5%
Commodities 1.9%
U.S. Bond Market -0.9%
10-Year Treas. Yield 4.60%
U.S. Dollar 1.4%
WTI Oil ($/bl) $105
Gold ($/oz) $4,562

The Week Ahead

  • Consumer Inflation (CPI)
  • Producer Inflation (PPI)
  • Retail Sales
  • Existing Home Sales
  • Industrial Production
  • Small Business Optimism
  • Initial Jobless Claims

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