Inflation Week on Wall Street Comes as Tariff Risk Re-Emerges

Takeaways

  • June CPI, PPI, and Retail Sales hit this week, offering key macro information for investors and policymakers

  • President Trump’s surprise 50% tariff on Brazil and copper imports leaves one outperforming sector in limbo

  • Bank earnings, along with outlooks from CEOs, make for a busy stretch

Investors may be happy to shift some of their focus away from the ongoing tariff saga and back toward economic data and earnings reports. This is a big week, as the June Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) hit the tape, while the Q2 reporting season kicks off in earnest with the banks. Then on Thursday, our economic calendar shows that the US Census Bureau will report June’s Retail Sales.

The Second Half Begins with a Tariff Bang

It's a trove of information for portfolio managers and macro-watchers to gauge, and trade policy news headlines are likely to continue breaking. On July 9, President Trump announced a surprise 50% levy on copper imports, followed by a steep 50% duty on Brazil.1 Together, it put the Materials sector in focus.

Although early, the resource-rich area was the second-best Q3 performer among the 11 S&P 500® groups through last Wednesday, outpacing the Information Technology sector and the high-momentum Industrials space. I.T. has been in the spotlight with NVIDIA (NVDA) becoming the first company to eclipse a $4 trillion market cap, while Industrials tagged a new all-time high just a handful of sessions ago.

So, the small sector has been on a big run...a bit under the radar, too. Will the one-two punch of copper and Brazil duties be a game-changer? It's hard to say right now, but once Q2 earnings reports are in hand, the situation may become clearer. Investors should also mark August 1 (while erasing July 9) on their calendars, as that’s when the president’s new reciprocal tariff rates may take effect.