The Rundown - Trump’s Crypto Fortune Balloons, Meta Builds a Cloud Business
Episode Date: July 1, 2026Market update for July 1, 2026.Check out the Public app for incredible investing tools and to support the show (LINK)Follow us on Instagram (@TheRundownDaily) for bonus content and instant reactions.I...n today’s episode, Zaid covers:S&P 500 and Nasdaq posting their best quarter since 2020What investors should watch in the second halfNike earnings, and why the stock is sliding despite beating expectationsAnthropic reaching a deal with the Trump administration to restore access to Fable and MythosMeta building a cloud business to sell AI computePresident Trump reporting more than $1 billion in crypto-related income last year
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Public.com presents the rundown.
Your daily market update in 10 minutes.
My name is Zadadmani, and today is Wednesday, July 1st.
In today's episode, we'll break down the market's monster second quarter
and what investors should watch for in the second half of the year.
We'll also recap Nike's earnings and tell you why meta is getting into the cloud business.
Then stick around to the end of the show to find out how much money President Trump
made from crypto last year. We got a great show for you today. Let's go.
Stocks closed out the first half of the year on a high note. The S&P 500 rose 0.8% on Tuesday,
and the NASDAQ jumped 1.5%. And I have to bring up the Dow again. It added 0.3% to close
at another record high. But I still don't care, though. Now, zooming out, Q2 overall was a memorable one
for the markets. The S&P 500 rose 15% while the NASDAQ went up 21%. It was actually the best
quarter for both indices since 2020. And this rally happened through a lot of chaos. You know, we had the
Iran War, of course, the oil spike, inflation worries, rate hike fears, the biggest IPO of all
time, and moments where investors started worrying about an AI bubble. But despite all of that stocks,
especially chip stocks, rallied hard. The semiconductor index climbed
88% in Q2, the best quarter ever in that index's history.
Some of the notable winners include Micron, which rallied 242% last quarter, and AMD, which jumped 186%.
And that sets up an interesting second half of the year.
Can this rally keep going?
And if it does, will it continue to be concentrated in tech and AI stocks, or will it broaden
out to other sectors?
So far, we're seeing the rally broadening out, and I think it helps that oil prices have cooled off
in Q2. WTI crude dropped 31% in Q2 to under $70 a barrel after the U.S. and Iran agreed to end the fighting.
Traffic in the Strait of Hormuz is picking up, but it's still unclear when traffic will fully normalize
and if this peace deal will hold. So it's still a fragile situation, but it's not something the
market is too worried about right now. To me, there are going to be two main things to watch in the
second half of 2026. The first thing is earnings. On yesterday's show, I mentioned that earnings and profit margins
have grown at a record pace in the last two quarters.
If companies can keep growing profits and expanding margins like they have,
this rally could keep going.
But if earnings start disappointing,
then it becomes harder for investors to justify these valuations.
The second thing to keep an eye on,
and probably the most important, is the Fed and the labor market.
The market is now pricing in multiple rate hikes by the end of the year.
But the Fed can only hike rates if the labor market holds up.
Now, so far, the labor market data has been strong.
and we'll get more information about that tomorrow morning when the June job report comes out.
So the next few weeks could really set the tone for the rest of the year.
You know, we're getting earnings in about a couple weeks.
And then there's a Fed meeting at the end of the month.
We're going to be staying on top of all that.
So if you're new here, definitely get subscribed for the podcast if you haven't already.
And tune in every day to stay in the loop.
Let's run through some headlines, starting with Nike.
Nike reported earnings last night.
And despite the company beating expectations, the stock is sliding today.
Let's get into the numbers.
Last quarter, Nike's revenues came in at $10.97 billion.
So just a hair shy of $11 billion.
Now, that was slightly better than expected, but revenues are still down 1% from the same quarter last year.
So Nike is still not growing their top line.
As for their profit, that came in at $1.07 billion, but that was heavily boosted by a one-time
tariff refund of $986 million after the surprise.
Court struck down many of President Trump's global tariffs earlier this year. So the headline
profit number looks decent, but the underlying business is still struggling, especially in China.
Sales in Greater China fell 12% to $1.3 billion. Nike is just getting crushed over in China by
local Chinese competitors like anti-sports and Li Ning. In fact, we covered a few weeks ago that
Li Ning signed Steph Curry to a 10-year shoe deal and now they're trying to expand into the U.S.
market. So Nike's going to start facing competition here.
in the U.S. as well from these Chinese companies.
And looking beyond China, Nike's Converse brand was a total disaster.
Sales fell 32%.
And Nike Direct, which includes Nike's own stores and website, fell 7%.
And I think the biggest problem is that management doesn't expect things to get better anytime soon.
The outgoing CFO of Nike, Matt Friend, told investors that we are not expecting the
environment to improve meaningfully over the next six months.
So that's why investors are dumping the stock.
shares fell as much as 8% in after hours trading before recovering a bit.
The stock is currently down around 4% at the time of this recording.
You know, there's been almost two years since CEO Elliott Hill took over the company.
There was a lot of hype around him coming in because he was a Nike lifer and they thought
that he could turn around the company.
But his turnaround plan so far hasn't worked yet.
Sales continue to slide and investors are losing patience.
Nike stock is down around 35% this year.
I think it's possible that Nike just might be fully cooked here.
The old Nike playbook just is.
isn't working the way it used to.
You know, Nike built one of the greatest brands in the world
on legendary marketing and using star athletes
and having a cultural dominance.
But today, consumers have way more options.
Athletes have way more leverage
and the sneaker market is a lot more fragmented.
So let me know in the comments on what you guys think.
Can Nike actually turn things around
or has the swoosh permanently lost its relevance?
Let's shift gears and talk about Anthropic.
The AI company behind Claude has finally reached
to deal with the Trump administration to bring back access to its most powerful AI models.
Now, a quick refresher here, back on June 9th, Anthropic released Fable to the public.
Fable was a guardrailed version of Anthropics' most powerful model called Mythos.
And the couple of days that I got to use it, it felt absolutely next level.
But apparently it was so good, especially at finding security flaws, that it freaked out cybersecurity experts.
And despite Anthropic putting in those guardrails on Fable to keep it from being misused,
Researchers at Amazon found a way to get around those guardrails and jailbreak the model.
So on June 12, the Commerce Department ordered Anthropic to restrict foreign access to fable and mythos over national security concerns.
Anthropics just decided to take down the models completely.
Well, over the last two and a half weeks, Anthropics said they reached an agreement with the U.S. government after building new safeguards that blocked jail breaks about 99% of the time.
So now the U.S. government is lifting their restrictions, and Anthropics said that access to fable will start coming back online.
today. To me, the bigger story here is that the U.S. government is starting to play a much bigger role
in AI development. President Trump signed an executive order recently that required AI companies to give the
government a look at new models 30 days before releasing them. OpenAI's newest model, GPT 5.6, is
rumored to be restricted by the U.S. government right now, and meta is reportedly being pressured
to start submitting their models for review as well. So I wonder what this does to AI innovation and
model development over time. Some are making the case that this is actually a
good thing because AI is so powerful that the U.S. government needs to take an active role in
overseeing the technology. But then on the other side, government intervention could restrict
innovation as well. So we'll see what ends up happening and if this leads to further AI
regulation down the line. Let's talk about some stocks making moves today. Meta shares are
surging this morning after Bloomberg reported that meta plans to get into the cloud business
to sell access to AI computing power.
This would put meta in competition
with heavyweights like Amazon Web Services,
Microsoft Azure, and Google Cloud.
This initiative is being built
under an internal group called Meta Compute.
One option would let outside developers
access AI models hosted on meta servers
similar to Amazon's Bedrock Service.
Meta could also sell raw compute capacity directly
competing with NeoCloud companies like CoreWeave.
And you know, this seems like a smart move to me
because meta has spent hundreds of billions of dollars
on data centers and chips for its AI ambitions.
And now, Meta can sell that excess compute they've gotten
and generate some revenue with it.
The markets seem to like this move for Meta.
The stock is up more than 7% this morning in reaction to this news.
Now, on the flip side, shares of Kroger are sliding this morning
after the grocery giant announced a deal to buy Giant Eagle
for $1.65 billion in cash and assume liabilities.
Giant Eagle runs nearly 200 supermarkets across Pennsylvania.
Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland, and Indiana, plus 11 standalone pharmacies, and they do about
$9 billion in annual sales.
Strategically, this deal makes sense.
You know, Kroger gets more scale in the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic, but investors probably are
having some grocery merger PTSD after Kroger's massive Albertson's deal collapsed.
Shares of Kroger are down around 3% this morning at the time of this recording.
Let's wrap the show with a fun fact.
's latest financial disclosures were released yesterday, and he made a lot of money from crypto.
According to his 2025 financial disclosure, President Trump reported more than $1.4 billion
in income tied to crypto ventures last year. That includes nearly $800 million from World Liberty
Financial, which is the crypto company co-founded by President Trump and his sons. The income from
that company came from token sales and the sale of interest in the business. He also reported about
$635 million from his Trump-branded meme coin. So yeah, the crypto business is booming for President
Trump. And to put this crypto number into perspective, Reuters says that Trump's golf and resort
business brought in just over $500 million last year. So the crypto income was almost three times
larger than the Gulf and Resort Empire. Now, this has obviously raised some ethics questions,
because President Trump has also pushed policies that are friendly to the crypto industry. So definitely
some conflict of interest, if you ask me. But the thing is, despite all these pro-crypto policies
over the last year, the crypto industry isn't a brutal bare market right now. Now, Bitcoin and
other cryptocurrencies are down big from the record highs. I mean, even Trump's own meme coin
got demolished. It peaked near a $15 billion market cap, and now it's currently sitting at around
$400 million. Well, all right, guys, that's the rundown for today. I hope you guys enjoyed today's
episode, thank you guys so much for listening, watching, and commenting. Shout out to Mike for all
the work behind the scenes. And we'll see you guys back here tomorrow.
