📊 Weekly Market Recap
- S&P 500 return Year-to-date were approximately -0.14%
- S&P 500 3 month return were approximately 1.52%
- S&P 500 return over the past 5 days were approximately -1.39%
This Week in the Markets – 3 Things to Know

Money Starts Playing Defense– This week highlighted a meaningful rotation beneath the surface of the market. Capital flowed out of high-growth tech names and into sectors like energy, consumer staples, and materials, which tend to hold up better during periods of uncertainty. Utilities and healthcare also saw increased inflows as investors leaned into stability, dividends, and predictable cash flows. That shift doesn’t signal fear, it signals caution and preparation. Investors are repositioning ahead of key economic data that could influence interest rates, inflation expectations, and the broader growth outlook. As a result, volatility expectations rose, reflecting uncertainty around how markets will digest new information. In this type of environment, disciplined risk management matters more than chasing momentum.
Big Spending, Bigger Questions– This week, concerns around AI weren’t about whether the technology works, but whether expectations have gotten ahead of reality. Tech stocks priced for near-perfect growth saw selling pressure almost the same amount of volume as last week. Just when the AI wave had a hope of a strong run, valuations and long-term earnings assumptions came back into play. Many of these companies are still executing well, but when financial statements are stretched, even solid results can trigger pullbacks. A growing question in the market is how much AI spending can realistically translate into sustained profits, and over what time frame. Traders who rode the AI wave earlier in the week used the volatility as a chance to lock in gains. AI remains a dominant long-term theme, but time will ultimately tell how efficiently massive investment can turn into durable profitability.
CPI REPORT– The January 2026 Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, released this morning, showed that inflation continues to cool, with headline inflation easing to a 2.4% annual rate, down from 2.7% in December and the lowest reading since May. Core inflation, which strips out food and energy, also declined to 2.5%, reinforcing the idea that underlying price pressures are slowly coming down. This matters because it signals that inflation isn’t re-accelerating, even as the economy remains resilient. For markets, this keeps the door open for potential rate cuts later in the year, even if the Fed isn’t in a rush just yet. Overall, it’s a constructive report that supports the narrative of gradual disinflation rather than a sudden slowdown.
Cooling Inflation, Cautious Tone
Markets wrapped up the week with a more measured tone as investors absorbed new economic data and reassessed expectations. The standout was Friday’s CPI report, which showed inflation continuing to ease and reinforced the broader disinflation narrative. While that helped calm inflation fears, it didn’t trigger a strong risk-on move across markets. Instead, trading reflected caution, with investors balancing improving inflation data against lingering macro uncertainty. Overall, the week felt more like a pause than a push in either direction.

Beyond CPI, market action was driven more by positioning and macro sensitivity than by headline-grabbing corporate news. Volatility picked up at times, highlighting how reactive markets remain to incremental data surprises. Investors appeared focused on protecting gains rather than chasing momentum, especially with several key reports still ahead. Bond markets echoed that wait-and-see approach, with yields moving but not breaking out decisively. It was a week defined by restraint and re-calibration.
Looking ahead, attention remains firmly on the Federal Reserve and the path of monetary policy. With inflation trending lower, the possibility of a rate cut is increasingly on the table if upcoming data continues to move in the right direction. Policymakers are likely to want consistent confirmation across inflation, labor, and growth metrics before acting. For now, the Fed appears comfortable staying patient, but the conversation is clearly shifting from if to when. Markets seem to be positioning accordingly, optimistic but still data-dependent.
S&P 500 SECTOR SNAPSHOT – Past Week
