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MarketBeat Week in Review – 06/08 - 06/12
Authored by MarketBeat Staff. Posted: 6/13/2026.
Key Points
- Stocks surged as hopes for a U.S.-Iran peace agreement eased concerns about oil prices and inflation.
- SpaceX's historic IPO debut, valued at nearly $1.8 trillion, energized investors and fueled market optimism.
- Beyond the IPO mechanics, SpaceX highlights how powerful growth narratives can drive investor sentiment.
- Special Report: Everyone wanted SpaceX. Smart money wants this.
Stocks rallied to end the week as two bullish catalysts converged. On the geopolitical front, reports suggested that a peace deal between the United States and Iran could be signed as early as this weekend. A reopening of the Strait of Hormuz would go a long way toward offsetting inflation concerns.
Investors also cheered the public debut of SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) on June 12. It is the largest initial public offering (IPO) in history, valued at nearly $1.8 trillion.
ALERT: Drop these 5 stocks before the market opens tomorrow! (Ad)
The Wall Street Journal is already raising the alarm about a potential market crash, and Weiss Ratings research points to the first half of 2026 as a particularly rough stretch for certain holdings.
Some of America's most popular stocks could take serious damage as a radical market shift plays out. Analysts at Weiss Ratings have identified five names you may want to remove from your portfolio before this unfolds.
If any of these are in your portfolio, now is the time to review your positions.
See the 5 stocks to avoidMany analysts will focus on the mechanics of the IPO, but the bigger story is what SpaceX represents. That may disappoint advocates of an efficient market, but investors often buy a story more than a stock.
That said, it’s impossible to know where SpaceX stock will be in six months, a year, or five years. There will be skeptics along the way, but this week belongs to the optimists and the true believers. To infinity and beyond!
Articles by Thomas Hughes
GameStop Corp. (NYSE: GME) continues to make headlines with the announcement of a $2 billion share buyback. That’s normally bullish for stocks, but Thomas Hughes explained why investors should be realistic about what the buyback is trying to accomplish.
NVIDIA Corp. (NASDAQ: NVDA) continues to build momentum, and analysts have noticed. As Hughes wrote this week, institutional buying gives NVDA a high floor, which is likely to bring retail investors back into the stock.
Casey’s General Stores Inc. (NASDAQ: CASY) has been a standout pick as a growth stock with defensive characteristics. This week, the company delivered another strong earnings report, and Hughes noted that the pre-earnings dip is likely to be a buying opportunity for retail investors.
Articles by Sam Quirke
Elon Musk’s other company, Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ: TSLA), is also moving higher this week. The move could be dismissed as riding the coattails of SpaceX. Sam Quirke wrote about the analyst upgrade that could finally change the “just a car company” narrative around TSLA.
Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL) announced a reboot of Siri, making it a dedicated app that is now a core part of the company’s AI strategy. But any gains the stock made have been short-lived. Quirke explained why the skeptics are selling, and why they may have Apple’s AI strategy all wrong.
It’s been a rough month for Amazon.com Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN). The stock is down more than 10% and is now lagging the S&P 500. Investors can’t ignore the CapEx spending that will eat into the company’s cash flow in the short term. However, Quirke noted that the business case for Amazon has never been stronger.
Articles by Chris Markoch
The SpaceX IPO has been taking the starch out of many SpaceX proxies, such as Planet Labs (NYSE: PL). Chris Markoch explained to investors why PL has come back to earth, and why that could be an opportunity.
Here on planet Earth, metals and mining stocks continue to be a solid trade. This week, Markoch looked at three multi-metal stocks that can give investors long-term exposure to copper, gold, and silver.
Summer is a historically quiet time for stocks. Markoch reminded investors that it could be a good buying opportunity for stocks that have recently experienced sharp pullbacks. He also highlighted three stocks to consider adding before July 4.
Articles by Ryan Hasson
Technology stocks have sold off for many reasons. Investors know this happens, but Ryan Hasson pointed out that it can also create opportunities. In this case, Hasson highlighted the opportunity in five mega-cap tech stocks worth a closer look.
Nebius Group (NASDAQ: NBIS) is one of the latest AI infrastructure companies to receive an endorsement from NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang. However, Hasson explained why the company’s fundamentals support that endorsement, which means NBIS is a buy on any pullback.
Articles by Leo Miller
In times of market volatility, insider buying can be a compelling signal. This week, Leo Miller pointed investors to three stocks that have seen significant insider buying, along with the bull case for each name.
The memory trade continues to build momentum. This week, Miller analyzed the latest earnings report from Everpure (NYSE: P), the company formerly known as Pure Storage. The leader in flash-based storage systems posted a strong report, but P is falling due to concerns about the certainty of storage supply.
Spotify Technology (NYSE: SPOT) hosted an Investor Day, and investors liked what they heard. The company outlined plans to achieve three long-term “North Stars” that include the broader goal of converting non-paying users into subscribers.
Articles by Nathan Reiff
Intel Corp. (NASDAQ: INTC) has been one of the best-performing stocks in 2026. This week, Nathan Reiff explained why investors may be overlooking the company’s potential in the quantum computing space and why it raises the question of whether Intel is a better quantum computing investment than the broader field.
A weak dollar can benefit investors if they know where to look. That was Reiff’s message as he highlighted three industrial stocks that are back in focus thanks to their strong international presence and overseas revenue.
The volatility investors are experiencing in 2026 is perhaps the best argument for investing in funds. This week, Reiff highlighted three ETFs that focus on sectors that are building momentum after a strong earnings season.
Articles by Dan Schmidt
Bitcoin is down sharply in 2026, and it’s taken many crypto-adjacent stocks down with it. This week, Dan Schmidt explained the reasons behind the crypto winter and three crypto stocks that are likely to stay on ice this summer.
Articles by Jeffrey Neal Johnson
INTC was up more than 20% this week on news of a foundry deal with Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ: GOOGL). Jeffrey Neal Johnson had the details of that deal and also explained why the stock’s recent bullish performance may still leave Intel undervalued based on its long-term AI story.
IREN Limited (NASDAQ: IREN) is becoming a hard-to-ignore part of the AI infrastructure trade. As Johnson wrote this week, “...stable infrastructure providers command premium valuations for their predictable, long-term cash flows.” Analysts agree, which is why IREN is being repriced quickly.
The patent cliff story for large-cap biotechnology companies is starting to become very real. The threat of margin compression is a key reason behind the recently announced $10.6 billion acquisition of Nuvalent (NASDAQ: NUVL) by GSK (NYSE: GSK). Johnson explains what this deal means for GSK and what other biotech companies may be next to acquire new assets.
Articles by Jennifer Ryan Woods
Many restaurant stocks have been tough trades as inflation eats away at their consumer base. However, this week, Jennifer Ryan Woods highlighted two underappreciated stocks that may be on the verge of a comeback.
For Wingstop Inc. (NASDAQ: WING), the battle is between short sellers who are betting against the stock and analysts who are raising their price targets. If the stock has found a base, this could get spicy.
The case for Cracker Barrel Old Country Store Inc. (NASDAQ: CBRL) was simple. The company delivered a better-than-expected earnings report that showed the company’s turnaround plan may be gaining traction.
Articles by Peter Frank
Aflac (NYSE: AFL) is a dependable income stock built on 44 consecutive years of dividend growth. The company’s earnings report backed up that outlook, but Peter Frank reminded investors that analysts are suggesting the company's quality is already priced in.
Frank also analyzed the consumer credit turnaround story that’s lifting Synchrony Financial (NYSE: SYF). The company delivered a bullish earnings report, but cyclical consumer credit risks remain a key caveat.
Allstate (NYSE: ALL) has engineered a dramatic earnings recovery, posting Q1 2026 net income of $2.4 billion after years of underwriting losses. Frank helped investors understand the solid report while pointing out the weather risks that come with the company’s May disclosure of $870 million in catastrophe losses.
The Biggest Opportunity From SpaceX’s IPO May Surprise You
Authored by Jeffrey Neal Johnson. Posted: 6/10/2026.
Key Points
- The SpaceX IPO is more than four times oversubscribed, leaving an estimated $225 billion in sidelined capital to rotate into public space stocks.
- Rocket Lab, the most direct public competitor to SpaceX, reported 63.4% revenue growth in Q1 2026 and holds a $2.2 billion launch backlog.
- Investors seeking diversified exposure to the space sector could consider the Procure Space ETF, which holds Rocket Lab, Redwire and others.
- Special Report: Everyone wanted SpaceX. Smart money wants this.
You have probably seen headlines about Senator Elizabeth Warren trying to delay the SpaceX IPO. While that makes for good political drama, the reality for investors is that the deal is almost certainly happening on Friday. The real story is not the political noise but the simple math of supply and demand. Getting your hands on SpaceX (NASDAQ: SPCX) shares will be nearly impossible for the average investor.
SpaceX's initial public offering is more than four times oversubscribed, meaning Wall Street's biggest players have placed orders for more than $300 billion in stock for a deal raising only $75 billion. When the dust settles, a staggering $225 billion, or more, in cash will be left on the sidelines from investors who wanted a piece of SpaceX but got locked out. That money will not just disappear; it's about to flood the rest of the publicly traded space sector.
What Happens When $225 Billion Needs a New Home?
ALERT: Drop these 5 stocks before the market opens tomorrow! (Ad)
The Wall Street Journal is already raising the alarm about a potential market crash, and Weiss Ratings research points to the first half of 2026 as a particularly rough stretch for certain holdings.
Some of America's most popular stocks could take serious damage as a radical market shift plays out. Analysts at Weiss Ratings have identified five names you may want to remove from your portfolio before this unfolds.
If any of these are in your portfolio, now is the time to review your positions.
See the 5 stocks to avoidAll that money that could not buy SpaceX stock has to go somewhere. Big investment funds have mandates to invest in the aerospace sector, so they'll immediately look for the next best thing. This creates a powerful sympathy bid, where the excitement and capital from a massive IPO spill over into related companies, lifting their valuations.
Think of it this way: large investment funds are often required to keep a certain percentage of their assets in specific industries, such as aerospace. If they cannot get SpaceX, they cannot just sit on that money. They have to find other space stocks to buy to stay on track with their investment goals. This predictable rotation of capital is what creates the opportunity. The challenge is knowing where to look.
Launchpads, Workshops, and Baskets
Navigating this spillover requires understanding the different types of companies that make up the space economy. Investors can generally break them down into three categories: launch providers, which are the sector's logistical backbone; infrastructure companies building the picks and shovels; and diversified funds that offer broader exposure.
Rocket Lab: The Established Rocket on the Pad
Rocket Lab (NASDAQ: RKLB) is the most direct public competitor to SpaceX in the small- to medium-satellite launch market. For large investors who need immediate exposure to the launch industry, Rocket Lab is the logical safe harbor.
Rocket Lab's financials show a strong foundation. The company has very little debt and plenty of cash on hand, which is crucial because it allows it to fund major projects like its new Neutron rocket without taking on risky loans.
The business is also growing at an impressive pace. Rocket Lab reported a 63.4% increase in revenue in the first quarter of 2026 compared to last year and already has a $2.2 billion backlog of scheduled launches. This predictable revenue stream is exactly what institutional investors look for when they need to deploy large amounts of capital quickly and safely.
Redwire: The Space Economy's Workshop
If launch providers are the trucking companies of space, Redwire Corporation (NYSE: RDW) is the company building the highways, warehouses, and tools.
Redwire specializes in critical space infrastructure, from solar arrays that power satellites to robotics and in-space 3D printing.
At first glance, Redwire's financials might look complex, showing negative profit margins and recent stock issuance. But investors should understand why those issues exist. Redwire is in high-growth mode, spending heavily now to build out unique technologies that could become the industry standard.
This is a classic picks-and-shovels play. Instead of betting on one specific mission, you're investing in the underlying hardware that everyone will need. The unusually high activity in the options market on June 10, 2026, suggests that some sophisticated investors are betting that Redwire's big upfront investments are about to start paying off in the form of high-margin government and commercial contracts.
Don't Pick a Rocket, Buy the Whole Fleet
For investors who find picking individual stocks too volatile, another strategy is to buy a basket of companies all at once through an exchange-traded fund (ETF). This approach offers instant diversification across the entire industry.
A popular option is the Procure Space ETF (NASDAQ: UFO), a leading pure-play space ETF. This fund specifically targets companies that generate the majority of their revenue directly from space-related activities, such as rocket manufacturing, satellite communications, and launch services. Its holdings provide a broad cross-section of the industry, including Rocket Lab and Redwire. For investors seeking direct, yet diversified, exposure to the growth of the space economy, an ETF like UFO can be a compelling alternative.
Your Final Pre-Launch Check
For investors seeking exposure to the space economy, the key takeaway is to look beyond the immediate IPO frenzy. Chasing SpaceX stock on day one could be a volatile ride filled with institutional-level competition. A different approach is to research the established public companies that form the backbone of the space industry. Understanding these secondary players and how the coming wave of capital could impact them may offer a more grounded strategy for participating in the sector's long-term growth.
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