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June 8, 2025

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The Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500 indices have moved sideways in the past few weeks as the recent momentum stalled. The S&P 500 Index is stuck at $6,000, its highest point since February 24, and 24% above its lowest point this year. 

Similarly, the Nasdaq 100 Index has moved to $21,800, up by 31% from its lowest point this year. The Dow Jones Index traded at $42,765, up by 16% from the YTD low. This article looks at the top 3 catalysts for these indices this week. 

Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500

US and China trade talks

The main catalyst for the three indices is the upcoming trade talks between the US and China in London. This meeting was scheduled during a phone call between Donald Trump and Xi Jinping of China last week.

It comes a few weeks after the two sides met in Switzerland and reached a few important agreements. For example, they agreed to lower tariffs from triple digits to double digits.

Recently, however, China and the US have accused each other of not fulfilling the agreement. China accuses the US of provocations, including suspending students from its universities and export controls on chips.

The US has accused China of continuing to block shipments of rare earth products that are used in the manufacturing process. 

Therefore, the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq 100 indices will react to any meeting outcome. They will likely surge if the two sides make progress and potentially a meeting between the two presidents. 

Such progress would be notable because the US and China are some of the biggest trading partners in the world.

However, there are signs that China is pivoting its business away from the US, which has become more confrontational. For example, its airlines are no longer buying Boeing jets, and are now planning to order 500 jets from Airbus.

US inflation data

The next key catalyst for the Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500 indices is the upcoming US inflation data on Wednesday.

Economists expect the data to show that inflation rose a bit, with the headline consumer price index (CPI) rising to 2.5% and the core CPI metric moving to 2.8%.

Signs that inflation is rising will be bearish for the stock market as it will signal that the Federal Reserve will maintain a hawkish tone for a while. This will, in turn, infuriate Donald Trump, who called for a “full point” cut, arguing that the ECB has slashed interest rates ten times. 

US stocks do well when the Federal Reserve is cutting interest rates or when it signals that it will do that. The CPI data comes after the US jobs data pointed to a strong economy.

Corporate earnings, Trump and Musk relations, and BBB

The other minor catalysts for the three US indices will be some corporate earnings, Trump and Elon Musk relations, and the Big Beautiful Bill. The only notable companies that will release their earnings are Adobe, Oracle, Chewy, GameStop, J.M Smucker, Stitch Fix, and Core & Main. 

Stocks will also react to the ongoing Trump and Musk relations, which hit a record low last week. Musk has pushed harder for Republicans to vote against the Big Beautiful Bill that ends EV mandates and increases government debt.

Elon Musk has a lot to lose as his companies have billions of dollars in government contracts. Therefore, there is a likelihood that he will want to make peace. A deal between the two will be good for the stock market

The post Top 3 catalysts for the Dow Jones, Nasdaq 100, and S&P 500 this week appeared first on Invezz

Procter & Gamble will cut 7,000 jobs, or roughly 15% of its non-manufacturing workforce, as part of a two-year restructuring program.

The layoffs by the consumer goods giant come as President Donald Trump’s tariffs have led a range of companies to hike prices to offset higher costs. The trade tensions have raised concerns about the broader health of the U.S. economy and job market.

P&G CFO Andre Schulten announced the job cuts during a presentation at the Deutsche Bank Consumer Conference on Thursday morning. The company employs 108,000 people worldwide, as of June 30, according to regulatory filings.

P&G faces slowing growth in the U.S., the company’s largest market. In its fiscal third quarter, North American organic sales rose just 1%.

Trump’s tariffs have presented another challenge for P&G, which has said that it plans to raise prices in the next fiscal year, which starts in July. The company expects a 3 cent to 4 cent per share drag on its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings from levies, based on current rates, Schulten said. Looking ahead to fiscal 2026, P&G is projecting a headwind from tariffs of $600 million before taxes.

P&G, which owns Pampers, Tide and Swiffer, is planning a broader effort to reevaluate its portfolio, restructure its supply chain and slim down its corporate organization. Schulten said investors can expect more details, like specific brand and market exits, on the company’s fiscal fourth-quarter earnings call in July.

P&G is projecting that it will incur non-core costs of $1 billion to $1.6 billion before taxes due to the reorganization.

“This restructuring program is an important step toward ensuring our ability to deliver our long-term algorithm over the coming two to three years,” Schulten said. “It does not, however, remove the near-term challenges that we currently face.”

P&G follows other major U.S. employers, including Microsoft and Starbucks, in carrying out significant layoffs this year. As Trump’s tariffs take hold, investors are watching Friday’s nonfarm payrolls report for May for signs of whether the job market has started to slow. While the government reading for April was better than expected, a separate reading this week from ADP showed private sector hiring was weak in May.

Shares of P&G fell more than 1% in morning trading on the news. The stock has fallen 2% so far this year, outstripped by the S&P 500′s gains of more than 1%. P&G has a market cap of $407 billion.

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A House committee witness who was called out by Democratic Rep. Robert Garcia of California during a hearing this week is pushing back after the congressman unearthed a past social media post on Social Security in an attempt to discredit his testimony. 

During a House oversight DOGE subcommittee hearing on Wednesday, Garcia grilled Power the Future CEO Dan Turner while holding up a posterboard of a past tweet calling Social Security a ‘government-sponsored Ponzi scheme.’

‘Madoff went to jail for it. Congress runs on it,’ the post said. ‘I should be able to keep 100% of my money and not watch government waste it with a paltry percentage return.’

Garcia then suggested that post was evidence that Turner lacks the credibility to be testifying about the billions of federal tax dollars directed to left-wing NGOs. 

A Ponzi scheme and so I think it’s interesting, of course, as one of our Republican witnesses is calling Social Security a Ponzi scheme, and that’s the person that we should be taking advice from here today,’ Garcia said. 

‘Without Social Security, 22 million people would be pushed into poverty. That includes over 16 million seniors and nearly 1 million children. And in fact, Elon Musk has also said and agreed with you, sir, that this is a Ponzi scheme. I think it’s ironic that you are one of our witnesses talking about efficiency when you want to attack the single best program that we have to support people not just out of poverty, but across this country to uplift them, to ensure they can afford a decent life.’

Fox News Digital spoke to Turner, who stood by his post and outlined his belief, echoed by many, that Social Security is structured like a Ponzi scheme by definition. 

‘Rep Garcia does not know the definition of Ponzi scheme,’ Turner said. ‘Social Security is the ultimate Ponzi, demanding more and more people at the bottom pay in to fund the people at the top, expect our demographics have this now reversed. The system will default. Mr. Garcia nor I will likely never see a dime. That should worry him more than my social media feed.’

Turner told Fox News Digital that if Garcia’s staff were to spend as much time trying to save Social Security as it did ‘combing through my social media’ then ‘perhaps the Ponzi scheme can survive long enough for me to get a small percentage of what the government confiscated during my lifetime.’

Turner explained that his father had received a ‘paltry percentage’ of what he paid into the program and the the government ‘kept the rest’ when his father died. 

‘That’s not just a Ponzi scheme, it’s government greed and politicians running a money-laundering operation to get reelected. No one should be compelled to pay into a failed system, yet in a free America, you don’t have that choice.’

In addition to Turner and Elon Musk suggesting that Social Security is by definition set up like a Ponzi scheme, Fox News Digital previously spoke to James Agresti, president of the nonprofit research institute Just Facts, who said the characterization has ‘validity.’

‘A Ponzi scheme operates by taking money from new investors to pay current investors,’ Agresti said. ‘That’s the definition given by the SEC, and contrary to popular belief, that’s exactly how Social Security operates.’

Agresti explained to Fox News Digital that Social Security, a program mired for decades with concerns about waste, fraud, and improper payments, ‘doesn’t take our money and save it for us, as many people believe, and then give it to us when we’re older’ like many Americans might believe. 

‘What it does is, it transfers money when we are young and working and paying into Social Security taxes,’ Agresti said. ‘That money, the vast bulk of it, goes immediately out the door to people who are currently receiving benefits. Now, there is a trust fund, but in 90 years of operation, that trust fund currently has enough money to fund two years of program operations.’

The trust fund only being able to last for two years is not a result of the fund being ‘looted,’ Agresti explained, but rather it was put in place to ‘put surpluses in it’ from money that Social Security collects in taxes that it doesn’t pay out immediately and pays interest on. 

‘The interest that’s been paid on that has been higher than the rate of inflation,’ Agresti said. ‘So, the problem isn’t that the trust fund has been looted. The problem is that Social Security operates like a Ponzi scheme.’

Democrats have vocally pushed back against efforts by Republicans and DOGE to reform Social Security or make cuts to what they say are examples of wasteful or improper spending from the department.

‘There’s been a lot of misinformation about that as of late,’ Agresti told Fox News Digital. ‘You know, when DOGE came in and suggested that the Social Security Administration cut, I think it was about 10,000 workers, Democrats erupted that this is going to weaken Social Security. But the fact of the matter is that Social Security pays those workers who are for administrative overhead from the Social Security trust fund. So, by cutting out the money that they’re paying them, you actually strengthen the program financially.’

Agresti told Fox News Digital that the current administrative overhead for Social Security is $6.7 billion per year, which is enough to pay more than 300,000 retirees the average old-age benefit.

‘Every single study shows social security going completely bankrupt in the next few years. Garcia and other democrats know the iceberg is ahead but rather than turn the ship, they are yelling at the iceberg about the senior citizens onboard,’ Turner said. ‘This Ponzi scheme is collapsing fast, and turning my tweets into posters is not going to stop it.’

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