Global Economy Briefing — June 12, 2026

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-12 06:01:47 | Updated at 2026-06-14 15:42:40 2 days ago

Rio Times Global Economy Briefing

The Big Three

  • A sharp relief rally. The Dow rose about 930 points and the Nasdaq gained 2.5% after President Trump cancelled threatened strikes on Iran and pointed to a deal agreed in principle.
  • Europe raised rates. The European Central Bank lifted its key rate to 2.40%, its first increase since 2023, as energy-driven inflation spread across the continent.
  • Wholesale prices ran hot. US producer prices rose 6.5% over the year, the fastest in nearly four years — a warning the relief rally chose to look past.

S&P 500

7,397.20

+1.79%

Rebounded from one-month low

Nasdaq

25,798.51

+2.50%

Chips and AI names led

Dow Jones

50,841.78

+1.85%

Up about 930 points

30Y / 10Y Treasury

5.04 / 4.51

-0.03%

Eased as oil fell

ECB Deposit Rate

2.25%

+0.25%

First hike since 2023

WTI Crude

88.40

-1.81%

Fell as strikes were called off

US PPI (YoY)

6.5%

+0.80%

Fastest in nearly four years

Intel

+9.00%

Upgraded on rising chip orders

United States

Release Actual Consensus Verdict
Producer Prices (YoY, May) 6.5% 6.4% Hot
Producer Prices (MoM, May) 1.1% 0.7% Above forecast
Core PPI (YoY, May) 4.9% 5.4% Below forecast
Initial Jobless Claims 229K 220K Higher
Continuing Claims 1,795K 1,780K Rose

Europe & United Kingdom

Release Actual Consensus Verdict
ECB Interest Rate Decision (Jun) 2.40% 2.40% Hiked
ECB Deposit Facility Rate 2.25% 2.00% prev Raised
German Current Account (Apr) 13.8B 24.5B prev Narrowed
Italian 3Y BTP Auction 3.03% 2.98% prev Higher

Asia-Pacific & Emerging Markets

Release Actual Consensus Verdict
Brazil Services Growth (MoM, Apr) 1.2% -1.1% prev Rebounded
Brazil Services Growth (YoY, Apr) 1.9% 3.3% prev Slowed
Mexico Industrial Production (YoY, Apr) 2.3% -0.8% Strong beat
Argentina CPI (MoM, May) 2.1% 2.3% Cooled
Peru Rate Decision (Jun) 4.25% 4.25% Hold
Global Economy Briefing — June 12, 2026 Global Economy Briefing — June 12, 2026

01 Markets rebound as the war threat eases

A single decision turned the week around. After threatening to hit Iran “very hard,” President Trump called off the strikes and said a deal had been agreed in principle with several regional partners, including Israel. Oil fell, the cloud of war lifted, and stocks staged their strongest rally in weeks.

The Dow climbed about 930 points, or 1.85%, the Nasdaq jumped 2.5%, and the S&P 500 rose 1.8%. The technology shares that had led the market down all month led it back up: Intel rose 9% on an analyst upgrade, while chip-equipment makers Lam Research and Applied Materials gained more than 8%, helped by anticipation of the giant SpaceX share sale due the next day.

Not every name joined in. Oracle fell about 9% after disappointing investors with its cloud revenue and the rising cost of its artificial-intelligence build-out — a reminder that the market is now scrutinising whether the enormous sums being spent on AI will pay off. But for one day, relief was the dominant emotion.

02 Europe joins the tightening turn, and Brazil gets its breathing room

The European Central Bank confirmed that the inflation problem is now global. It raised its key rate to 2.40%, the first increase since 2023, responding to the same energy-driven price pressures unsettling the United States. The era of falling rates across the wealthy economies is, for now, over.

Against that backdrop, the fall in oil prices was the most important development for Brazil. Cheaper crude protects the fuel-price relief that has driven Brazilian inflation lower over the past month, and it eases the pressure on the real that a rising-oil, strong-dollar world creates. The domestic data helped too: Brazil’s services sector grew 1.2% in April, bouncing back from a contraction, and consumer confidence remains the highest in the Americas.

This leaves Brazil’s central bank in a more comfortable position than its peers. While Europe raises rates and the United States debates doing the same, Brazil is still on course to lower its Selic rate from 14.50% later in the year, supported by easing inflation and resilient growth. The one condition is that oil stays calm — and that, as the day’s events showed, can change with a single announcement. Across the region the picture was steady, with Argentine inflation cooling and Peru holding its rate.

Live Market IntelligenceGlobal Markets — Live BoardInside: market breadth, the sector heatmap, currencies & rates, the Latin America scoreboard and the full instrument board.

Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence

Global Markets — Live Board

World
Jun 12, 2026 · 02:53

S&P 500 · benchmark

7,394
+1.75%

Market breadth · 15 names

100% advancing

15 ▲ advancing0 declining ▼

Currencies, rates & key inputs

Full instrument board

Instrument Last Change YoY Prev. High Low Volume
SPX 7,394 +1.75%
NDX 29,446 +3.29%
DJI 50,849 +1.86%
RUT 2,921 +1.88%
US10Y 4.4630 -1.74%
VIX 19.44 -2.16%
DAX 24,210 +0.06%
FTSE 10,304 +0.48%
CAC 8,201 +0.48%
STOXX 621.53 +0.54%
NIKKEI 66,603 +3.72%
HSI 24,719 +1.94%
KOSPI 8,367 +7.77%
CSI300 4,793 +1.49%
NIFTY 23,358 +0.85%
TSX 34,671 +1.52%
GOLD 4,197 +2.61% +24.14% 4,090 4,268 4,193 28,891
SILVER 66.68 +4.38% +84.13% 63.88 68.08 66.58 7,368

Largest moves today

KOSPI
8,367
+7.77%

SILVER
66.68
+4.38%

NIKKEI
66,603
+3.72%

NDX
29,446
+3.29%

GOLD
4,197
+2.61%

VIX
19.44
-2.16%

HSI
24,719
+1.94%

RUT
2,921
+1.88%

The session read

The S&P 500 rose 1.75%, with breadth positive — 15 of 15 names higher. KOSPI led, while DAX lagged.

From The Rio Times

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03 The paradox — markets cheered while inflation quietly worsened

Lost in the celebration was an uncomfortable fact. On the same day stocks surged, US wholesale prices rose 6.5% over the year, their fastest pace in nearly four years, with the monthly jump well above what economists expected.

Wholesale prices often signal where consumer prices are heading next, so the report suggests this week’s inflation scare may not be over. Yet investors brushed it aside, choosing to focus on the easing of war fears instead. It is a familiar pattern: markets can hold two contradictory ideas at once, rallying on good news while a slower-moving problem builds in the background. The relief over Iran is real, but the inflation pressure that has reshaped expectations all month did not disappear — it simply waited for a quieter day to matter again.

04 What to watch today and this week

  • Friday: The SpaceX share sale, expected to be the largest in history, with more than $100 billion in orders from small investors alone.
  • Friday: Brazil’s retail sales, a measure of how much the high Selic rate is slowing household spending.
  • Friday: US consumer sentiment, an early read on whether the inflation scare is denting confidence.
  • Next week: The Federal Reserve meets on June 16 and 17, its first decision under Chair Kevin Warsh; a hold is expected, but its message on inflation is what matters.
  • This week: Whether the tentative Iran agreement holds. A genuine, lasting deal would pull oil lower and ease the inflation problem; a collapse would bring the threat straight back.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did the market rebound so strongly?

The main reason was the easing of war fears. After threatening severe strikes on Iran, President Trump called them off and pointed to a deal agreed in principle with regional partners. That sent oil prices lower and removed, at least temporarily, the biggest threat hanging over markets. Technology and chip stocks, which had fallen hardest during the month’s decline, led the recovery, with the Nasdaq gaining 2.5% and the Dow rising about 930 points.

Why did the European Central Bank raise rates?

For the same reason the United States is worried about inflation: rising energy costs. The conflict with Iran and disruption to oil shipments have pushed prices higher across Europe, lifting eurozone inflation to 3.2%, well above the bank’s 2% target. In response, the ECB raised its key rate to 2.40%, its first increase since 2023. It marks a significant shift, confirming that the move away from cheap money is happening across the wealthy economies, not just in America.

What does the falling oil price mean for Brazil?

It is helpful on several fronts. Lower oil protects the recent fall in Brazilian fuel prices, which has been the main driver of the country’s improving inflation. It also relieves pressure on the real, because a calmer oil market and steadier global mood reduce the flight toward the dollar. Combined with a rebound in Brazil’s services sector and the strongest consumer confidence in the Americas, it keeps the central bank on track to lower its interest rate later this year.

Should the hot wholesale inflation report be a concern?

It is worth watching closely. Wholesale prices, which measure costs before they reach the shop shelf, rose 6.5% over the year — the fastest in nearly four years — and often point to where consumer prices are heading. The market largely ignored it on the day, distracted by the good news on Iran. But it reinforces the view that inflation pressure remains, and it is one reason investors no longer expect the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates this year.

What is the SpaceX share sale and why does it matter?

SpaceX is preparing what is expected to be the largest stock market debut in history, with retail investors alone submitting more than $100 billion in orders. Its significance goes beyond the company itself: it reflects how much money is flowing into companies tied to artificial intelligence and advanced technology, which need vast sums to build data centres and infrastructure. A successful debut would signal that enthusiasm for the technology theme remains strong, even after this month’s sharp falls in chip stocks.

Reported for The Rio Times — Global Economy Briefing. Filed June 12, 2026 — 08:00 BRT. Sources: CNBC, Trading Economics, Schwab, TheStreet, The Rio Times. Previously: June 11 · June 10.

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