Yesterday gave investors a lot to chew on. Stocks rallied hard on inflation data that came in cooler than expected, but Nike's latest earnings report served as a reminder that not everything is going smoothly in the global economy.
Markets Find Their Footing
Broad indices bounced back in a big way yesterday, regaining technical ground after recent selling pressure left some areas looking oversold. The SPY climbed about 0.76%, while the QQQ jumped 1.46%, with cyclical and tech sectors leading the charge. It was the kind of move that suggests buyers were waiting at support levels, ready to step in once conditions looked more favorable.
Tech and high-momentum ETFs lagged a bit, but the overall market action showed a clear rotation into value and yield-sensitive areas. Traders seemed to be betting that softer inflation data means the Fed might have more room to ease up on monetary policy, which is exactly the kind of signal that gets people excited about rate-sensitive plays.
Inflation Keeps Cooling Down
The November CPI headline number came in at 2.7%, comfortably below the 3.1% that economists were expecting and down from roughly 3.0% previously. That's a meaningful decline, and it suggests inflation pressures are easing more quickly than many anticipated.
Core inflation, which strips out the volatile food and energy categories, also softened. Shelter costs and other key components rose more slowly than forecasts suggested, pointing to broader moderation across the board. When you combine this with mixed signals from the labor market, it paints a picture of price pressures moving closer to the Fed's 2% target. That tightens the decision-making window for future rate moves, and it's why markets reacted so positively.
Nike's Earnings Paint a Troubling Picture
Nike reported results that technically beat expectations, with revenue of about $12.4 billion and earnings of $0.53 per share. But shares still fell more than 10% after hours, which tells you everything about how investors actually feel about the business right now.
The big problem? China. Sales in the region dropped roughly 17% year-over-year, a massive decline that significantly dragged on overall results. Management described the turnaround effort as still being in the "middle innings," which is corporate speak for "we're not out of the woods yet." Inventory challenges and weak store traffic in Greater China continue to weigh on performance, and margins contracted as tariffs and promotional activity ate into profitability.
The message here is pretty clear: global demand outside North America remains uneven, and Nike's struggles in China highlight broader concerns about consumer spending in one of the world's most important markets. Even when you beat earnings estimates, if the underlying story isn't compelling, investors will vote with their feet.




