Dear readers,
Yesterday’s story was rotation — money finding its way out of crowded AI trades and into financials, industrials, and small-caps. That story just got interrupted by explosions over the Strait of Hormuz. Crude is spiking, the Federal Reserve is about to publish its first policy minutes under a new chairman, and the crypto market is quietly bleeding out the liquidity that fueled its rally. Three separate stress tests, one week, and Wall Street doesn’t get to choose which one it wants to focus on.
Hormuz Blows Up the Inflation Trade
The fragile truce in the Middle East didn’t survive the week. President Trump declared the agreement with Iran “effectively over,” and the U.S. military answered attacks on commercial shipping — including a Qatari LNG tanker — with strikes on more than 80 Iranian targets across the Strait of Hormuz. Washington simultaneously stripped Iran of its remaining licenses to sell oil abroad.
Commodity markets didn’t wait for clarification. Oil jumped more than 5%, with Brent crude back at $78.01 a barrel and WTI at $73.96. The equity market responded exactly the way you’d expect: a hard rotation into energy and out of anything that burns fuel for a living. Exxon Mobil, Chevron, and ConocoPhillips each gained close to 2%, while Delta and United dropped 2% to 4% as the market repriced their cost structure in real time. The uncomfortable subtext for investors is that inflation, which had only just started cooling, now has a fresh and entirely unwelcome tailwind — right as the Fed’s room to maneuver was already shrinking.
The Fed’s First Word Under Warsh, and Wall Street’s First Real Report Card
Against that backdrop, monetary policy is back at the center of the conversation. At 2 p.m. Eastern today, the Federal Reserve releases the minutes from its June meeting — the first policy record published under new Chair Kevin Warsh, who held rates at 3.50% to 3.75% at that gathering. With inflation still running at roughly double the Fed’s 2% target, analysts expect a hawkish tone. The more interesting question is whether Warsh deliberately pulls back on forward guidance, keeping his options open rather than committing to a path while missiles are still flying over a major shipping chokepoint.
The bigger test, though, arrives next Tuesday, July 14, when JPMorgan Chase and Goldman Sachs open second-quarter earnings season. Those results matter more than the headline numbers suggest. Loan books and credit-loss provisions at the country’s largest banks will show, in unforgiving detail, whether high rates are starting to break American consumers and small businesses — or whether the economy still has the shock absorbers to take the hit.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying SK Hynix?
Crypto’s Quiet Liquidity Problem
The crypto headlines have been about Bitcoin sliding below $63,000 and roughly $450 million in forced liquidations, mostly on long positions. But the more consequential story is happening beneath the price chart, in the plumbing of the market itself.
Stablecoins — the working capital of the entire crypto ecosystem — contracted by 2.4%, or $7.7 billion, in June, bringing total supply down to $312 billion. That’s the sharpest monthly decline since TerraUSD collapsed in 2022. Tether alone pulled $2.5 billion USDT off the Ethereum network over the weekend. Historically, Bitcoin has tracked stablecoin supply closely: when the pool of dollar-equivalent liquidity grows, prices tend to follow; when it shrinks, they don’t. That correlation helps explain why even the modest $21 million of recent inflows into U.S. spot Bitcoin ETFs haven’t moved the needle. There simply isn’t enough fresh liquidity in the system to support a real rebound — no matter how the ETF flows look on any given day.
The AI Trade Gets a Reality Check
Even the sector that has driven markets for the better part of two years is showing some cracks. Samsung guided to a record operating profit of $58.4 billion for the quarter just ended — and its stock fell 7% anyway. The broader memory-chip sector, including Micron and SK Hynix, has now slid into a bear market, trading roughly 20% below its recent highs.
Investors are starting to ask a pointed question: how much of the AI infrastructure buildout is actually paying for itself? Microsoft may be answering it in real time. According to industry reports, the company has begun quietly swapping out external models from OpenAI and Anthropic in core products like Excel and Outlook in favor of its own, cheaper MAI systems — a cost-cutting move with obvious implications. The message for the sector: the era of unlimited AI spending is giving way to a harder-nosed phase, one where the winners will be companies that can turn AI into efficient, profitable software rather than an open-ended infrastructure bill.
The Takeaway
Today’s Fed minutes will set the tone, but they won’t settle anything. The real answers arrive over the next several days: whether oil’s spike forces the Fed’s hand on inflation, whether JPMorgan and Goldman’s loan books next Tuesday confirm the consumer is holding up, and whether crypto’s liquidity drought is a temporary air pocket or a structural reset. None of these three stories is fully written yet — which is exactly why this week matters more than most.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial
Ad
SK Hynix Stock: Buy or Sell?! New SK Hynix Analysis from July 8 delivers the answer:
The latest SK Hynix figures speak for themselves: Urgent action needed for SK Hynix investors. Is it worth buying or should you sell? Find out what to do now in the current free analysis from July 8.
SK Hynix: Buy or sell? Read more here...












