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Markets start to gear up for summer drama

Markets start to gear up for summer drama originally appeared on TheStreet.

Investors have a problem to work through: How to decide how and when to invest or sell — and what all that entails.

Stocks had a good week, with the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rising 1.5% and closing above 6,000 for the first time since Feb. 21. Friday’s big rally had some market watchers declare 6,500 on the index a real possibility.

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The other big averages rose at least 1.2% on the week. The small-cap Russell 2000 Index jumped 2.9%.

There were lots of winners like:

  • On Semiconductor  (ON) , up 19.4%.

  • Quantum Computing  (QUBT) , up 21%.

  • Robinhood Markets  (HOOD) ,  up 13.2%.

  • Appliance/electronics retailer Best Buy  (BBY) , up 10.2%.

And one clear non-winner: Tesla  (TSLA) , down more than 14.8% in the wake of CEO Elon Musk’s flame-throwing departure from the White House.

An important downside: Bond yields moved up. The 10-year Treasury finished Frida with a 4.512% yield. Mortgage rates adjusted nearly to 7%.

“I truly find it remarkable that interest rates (the foundation of all discounted dividend/cash flow models) are climbing so rapidly, yet equities are unconcerned,” Doug Kass wrote in his Daily Diary on the Street Pro.

Related: Scott Galloway sends blunt message to Elon Musk

The week ahead offers some important earnings reports, but if you you’re thinking of putting money to work, take a breath. This may also be a week in which what happens outside the stock and bond markets may prove more important that what happens.

The events start with the meeting scheduled Monday in London between trade representatives from the United States and China to get the tariff negotiations moving.

There is an August deadline get to a deal done, and President Donald Trump, not known for patience, may begin to get antsy.

Related: Berkshire Hathaway shares sag since Buffett say he’s retiring

There is a closer deadline: July 9 for all the other trade deals to get done, and one isn’t hearing much on that front, either.

Markets will start getting nervous over these problems, and it will be tricky then because second-quarter earnings reports will start to come out.

In addition, Apple  (AAPL)  is holding its World Wide Developer Conference this week. News may be committed at the event.

Delta Air Lines  (DAL)  and PepsiCo  (PEP)  are expected to report the week of July 7. JPMorgan Chase  (JPM)  says it will report on July 15.

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