
2026/6/25 · 22:43
May PCE: Sticky inflation, soft yields, and an S&P 500 split by megacap tech
May PCE matched consensus but kept inflation far above the Fed's target, while early trading showed the S&P 500 was still being pulled between resilient growth and pressure on megacap tech.
Data cutoff: 9:58 a.m. New York time on June 25, 2026 (9:58 p.m. GMT+8), the first high-confidence intraday S&P 500 read after the release.
The May PCE report did not deliver a fresh inflation surprise. It still mattered, because the print confirmed that the Fed's preferred gauge is stuck well above target, while early S&P 500 trading was already showing how little room the market has for another rate scare. 1 2
What the report showed
| Measure | May print | Street view | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headline PCE price index, year over year | 4.1% | Reuters said economists expected 4.1%; Morningstar's pre-release note also pointed to 4.1% | The line matched consensus, but it was still the first reading above 4% since April 2023. 1 3 4 |
| Headline PCE price index, month over month | 0.4% | Reuters' poll expected 0.4%; Morningstar expected 0.5% | The monthly print was firm, but not above the street's top-end forecast. 1 3 4 |
| Core PCE price index, year over year | 3.4% | Reuters said economists expected 3.4%; Morningstar's FactSet-based forecast was 3.3% | This was the highest core reading since October 2023 and still far from the Fed's 2% target. 1 3 4 5 |
| Core PCE price index, month over month | 0.3% | Reuters and CNBC both described the figure as in line with consensus | The core print did not force a rethink on its own, but it also did not cool the rate-hike debate. 1 3 5 |
| Spending and income | PCE +0.7%, real PCE +0.3%, personal income +0.7% | CNBC said spending came in stronger than expected by 0.1 percentage point | Consumers kept spending even with inflation still hot, which makes a quick dovish turn harder to justify. 1 5 |
Why the market reaction was mixed
The first reaction was not a clean risk-off move. Treasury yields edged lower after the release, with the 10-year near 4.365% and the 2-year around 4.10%, which says the bond market took some comfort from the fact that the print met expectations rather than beating them. 6
But the equity tape was still weak where it mattered most for the index. At 9:58 a.m. New York time, the S&P 500 was down 0.38% at 7,330.11, the Nasdaq Composite was down 1.20%, and the Dow was up 0.40%. Eight of 11 major sectors were higher, led by industrials at about 2%, while technology fell 1%. 2
That split mattered. Apple fell 4.8%, Nvidia, Microsoft, and Alphabet slipped 1.5% to 2.7%, while Micron jumped 10% and Qualcomm rose 3%. In other words, the index was being pulled in opposite directions: a stronger broad economy on one side, and a still-expensive megacap growth complex on the other. 2
Reuters quoted Generali strategist Michele Morganti saying inflation remained elevated for now, but U.S. equities still looked capable of absorbing both the current environment and a somewhat more hawkish Fed. CNBC's Heather Long was blunter: inflation was at a 3-year high, and the key question was how much relief would show up by September. 2 5
What this means for the S&P 500
The simplest read is that the report kept the Fed on a hawkish path without delivering a panic shock. That is usually enough to cap valuations, especially when the market's heaviest weights are still vulnerable to duration pressure. The PCE print itself did not break anything, but it also did not create the conditions for a broad multiple expansion. 1 3
A second read is that breadth looked better than the headline index. Industrials and other non-tech groups were holding up, while tech dragged. That makes the S&P 500 more sensitive to stock selection inside the index than to the headline macro print alone. 2
A third read is that the macro backdrop still argues for patience. CNBC noted that the same morning's GDP revision came in at 2.1% and weekly jobless claims fell to 215,000. That is not the kind of backdrop that usually forces the Fed to turn more dovish just because one inflation print matched expectations. 5
For index investors, the practical takeaway is simple: the PCE report kept rate risk alive, but the bigger near-term driver for the S&P 500 was still megacap tech behavior. If the leaders stay under pressure, a headline-consensus inflation report will not be enough to carry the index on its own.




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