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Posted June 16, 2026 at 10:45 am
We’re going to the moon and Mars!
Markets entered last week with eyes fixed on the SpaceX initial public offering (IPO), but the feared “market disruption” never materialized. It was always an overstated fear to me. SpaceX floated only 4%–7% of its equity, raising roughly $75 billion against a valuation of nearly $1.8 trillion.1 In a US stock market that typically trades between $500–$700 billion per day,2 that’s more than a rounding error but not a market-disrupting event. Most SpaceX shares remain locked up with early investors, and the float is simply too small to meaningfully distort liquidity or sentiment.
Whether the valuation is justified is a debate for stock pickers and futurists. On current revenue, it seems aggressive. If the company succeeds in building low‑orbit data centers delivered by reusable rockets, perhaps it won’t look so stretched. But that’s a specific stock story, and not a macro signal. The SpaceX IPO is likely best understood as an idiosyncratic event, not evidence of broad market excess.
The more consequential driver of markets remains policy. Markets are less likely to fear ambitious space companies, in my view, than central banks making the wrong move.
Three principles I still hold:
Against that backdrop, I don’t see the Federal Reserve (Fed) raising rates. The recent inflation uptick3 was predictable once gasoline prices jumped.4 What matters more are inflation expectations, and 3‑ and 5‑year breakevens declining to 2.40%,5 which signal that markets don’t anticipate runaway inflation.
Oil prices have been easing with the hopes of a Strait of Hormuz reopening.6 Even though we’ve been disappointed with negotiations with Iran before, that may be beside the point. With consumers already strained by elevated fuel costs, tightening policy into that pressure could be counterproductive.
The European Central Bank (ECB), however, faces a different challenge. A single‑mandate central bank may be forced to respond to inflation even when it’s driven by supply shocks that simultaneously weaken growth. Those dynamic risks can turn a temporary price spike into a policy error. I suspect the ECB will ultimately need to reverse course.
The parallels between this year and last are increasingly hard to ignore.
In both cases, three things are the same. The underlying economic and earnings environment remained sound.7 A geopolitical or policy shock temporarily interrupted a broadening market.8 Once uncertainty eased, the advance resumed,9 accompanied by improved breadth within US indexes10 and sound global stock performance.11
It feels like we may be following the same playbook.
I won’t say markets are “going to the moon” — that would be promissory. But I’ll say that I believe the conditions that matter the most still point toward a continuation of market performance rather than a reversal. The SpaceX IPO wasn’t the hurdle it was made out to be, in my view. I don’t see this as a market levitating on speculative fumes. The bigger stories are central banking, inflation expectations, and the gradual easing of geopolitical uncertainty.
And on those fronts, the path of least resistance could still look upward.
| Date | Region | Event | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| June 15 | China | Industrial production (May) | Signals global demand and factory momentum |
| China | Retail sales (May) | Tests whether consumer demand is holding up | |
| June 16 | US | Retail sales (May) | Read-through on the strength of US consumer |
| UK | Labour market report | Wages and jobs pressure inflation outlook | |
| Eurozone | ZEW economic sentiment | Early read on investor confidence in growth | |
| June 17 | US | Federal Reserve rate decision | Sets the tone for policy and market direction |
| UK | Consumer Price Index (CPI) (May) | Key input for rate path and real incomes | |
| Eurozone | CPI final (May) | Confirms inflation trend for policy outlook | |
| Japan | Trade balance (May) | Tracks export demand and currency impact | |
| June 18 | US | Initial jobless claims | High-frequency read on labor market cracks |
| UK | Bank of England rate decision | Signals how far tightening has to go | |
| Eurozone | European Central Bank (ECB) economic bulletin | Insight into policy thinking and risks | |
| Japan | CPI (May) | Gauges whether inflation shift is sticking | |
| June 19 | US | Housing starts (May) | Snapshot of housing activity and demand |
| Eurozone | Current account balance | Shows external demand and capital flows | |
| Japan | Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) (flash, June) | Early signal on global factory activity |
—
Originally Posted June 15, 2026
Market story: Monetary policy, not rockets by Invesco US
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