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Ahead of this final trading day of the week — which has climbed past Friday’s highs after a tumultuous past few sessions — pre-market futures are up again, following a boffo Thursday that saw major indexes rise between +1.75% (S&P 500) and north of +2.5% (Nasdaq). Currently, the Dow is up +300 additional points, the S&P 500 +30, the Nasdaq +70 and the small-cap Russell 2000 is +13 points higher.
SpaceX to Make History on Its IPO Today
Elon Musk’s SpaceX (SPCX) will not be the first publicly-traded space rocket company — there are Rocket LabRKLB, EchoStarSATS, AST SpacemobileASTS and Virgin Galactic SPCE, just to name a few — but it will be the biggest. Currently valued between $1.75-2.00 trillion in market capitalization, today’s IPO is underwritten by Goldman SachsGS and is expected to raise $75 billion.
The finances get a bit gnarly fairly quickly when we look into this IPO: while more than 555 million shares will be on offer, there is a known lockup period out in mid-August and some two dozen levered ETFs related to SpaceX going public, again just to name a couple examples. This doesn’t even begin to address Musk’s expressed interest for SpaceX to acquire Tesla TSLA, the CEO’s other trillion-dollar corporation.
Without getting too deep into the smoke on the launchpad, suffice it to say this IPO is not guaranteed to blast off and take retail markets with it. Those early investors in the company — SpaceX was founded way back in 2002 — will clearly do great today; they’ve literally had this moment circled on their calendars for years.
Why SpaceX is a long-term winner is crystal clear: with database installation outside the Earth’s atmosphere, and perhaps energy stations and other huge enterprises as well, SpaceX’s utility is vast and forward looking. Its Starlink satellite systems (more than 10K and growing) has already manifest itself as a key cog in global communications. So while the near-term hype may not be worth the navigation to get a piece of this IPO, ultimately SpaceX looks to be nothing short of a staple of the American economy.
Meanwhile, after today’s open, the latest Consumer Sentiment survey from the University of Michigan is expected to improve slightly off May’s all-time low 44.8, but only up to a still-paltry 46.0. A full 57% of respondents last month cited a high cost of living — sparked by high gasoline prices that resulted after the war on Iran led to the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. Politically speaking, Republicans and Independents joined Democrats at these low sentiment levels.
Finally, as last week was Jobs Week and this week addressed Inflation, next week brings us key data on the Housing market. Housing Starts & Building Permits, Home Builder Confidence, and Pending Home Sales will give us a clearer picture of this space, which looks to be rebounding off multi-year lows in recent months.
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Central Garden & Pet’s Cost and Simplicity agenda remains a multi-year driver of operating discipline across sourcing, manufacturing, distribution, portfolio optimization and overhead.
Premium assets, leasing demand, portfolio actions and liquidity support Vornado, while premier Manhattan exposure remains the primary growth driver ahead.
Enterprise mix, multi-application adoption, expanding emerging products and raised outlook support durable growth for Samsara with increasing profitability and disciplined cash generation.
Carpenter Technology will gain from strong demand in its markets, cost-cutting initiatives and efforts to preserve liquidity. Acquisitions and investing in additive manufacturing will also aid growth.
Grainger will continue to gain from the ongoing momentum in the United States, as well as strong demand its products. Pricing actions and inventory reduction efforts will also aid growth.
Improved premium income and underwriting margin, growth in average invested assets, non-competitive market, robust cash flow, capital deployment measures drive growth for Globe Life.
The TJX Companies’ off-price business model, along with its strategic store locations and impressive demand for products, is likely to aid its performance.
Helen of Troy drives growth through Leadership Brands, global expansion, and its bold “Elevate for Growth” strategy. Efficiency, innovation, and agility fuel its path forward.
Competition, satellite timing, government budget swings, leverage, and capital needs could delay returns and keep earnings volatility elevated for investors.
Applied Digital Corporation (APLD)Downgraded: 06/06/26
Heavy construction, concentrated customers, and volatile reporting from cloud assets and stock compensation can delay sustainable profitability and returns ultimately.
Higher leverage, acquisition integration costs, litigation exposure, and Europe market volatility could weigh on earnings and sentiment across cycles periodically.
Campbell faces ongoing pressure from a slow Snacks turnaround, significant margin compression and a weak FY26 outlook, raising concerns about earnings recovery and profitability.
Tyson Foods leverages a diversified protein portfolio, strong chicken performance and global expansion to deliver resilient growth and long-term shareholder value.
Resilient travel demand, premium mix, loyalty partnerships, and technology-led personalization support revenue durability, cash generation, and strategic flexibility over cycles.
Strength in the Energy Generation/Storage business, balance sheet strength, and focus on autonomous driving, robotics and artificial intelligence are set to drive Tesla.
Kroger drives growth with digital expansion, private label success, fresh offerings and strategic partnerships, while investments in AI and value creation fuel long-term scalability.
Central Garden & Pet’s Cost and Simplicity agenda remains a multi-year driver of operating discipline across sourcing, manufacturing, distribution, portfolio optimization and overhead.
Intel’s leading position in PC market, strength in servers, growing clout in software, IoT & ADAS domains and headway in process technology are positive indicators of future growth prospects.
Traffic-led comps and growing digital, advertising, membership and marketplace streams support margins as Target invests in stores and disciplined execution.