As the trading week wraps up on Friday, June 12, 2026, market participants will parse a compact slate of data that has the potential to affect risk appetite and positioning across several sectors. The University of Michigan's consumer sentiment report is scheduled for the morning and will be followed by Baker Hughes rig counts around midday. In the afternoon, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission's weekly Commitments of Traders releases will provide a cross-section of speculative positioning in futures markets.
Summary of the day's notable releases
- 9:00 AM ET - Michigan Consumer Sentiment (Final): Forecast 46.6, Previous 44.8. This index measures the relative level of current and future economic conditions based on a survey of approximately 500 consumers.
- 9:00 AM ET - Michigan Consumer Expectations (Final): Forecast 44.3, Previous 44.1. This component of the Michigan sentiment index reflects responses to standard questions about future economic conditions.
- 9:00 AM ET - Michigan Current Conditions (Final): Forecast 46.2, Previous 45.8. The current conditions component is based on two standard questions about present economic circumstances.
- 9:00 AM ET - Michigan 1-Year Inflation Expectations: Previous 4.8% - the percentage consumers expect prices to change during the next 12 months.
- 9:00 AM ET - Michigan 5-Year Inflation Expectations: Previous 3.9% - the median expected price change for the next five years reported in the survey.
- 12:00 PM ET - Baker Hughes U.S. Rig Count: Previous 431. A widely watched barometer for drilling activity and a leading indicator of demand for oil products.
- 12:00 PM ET - U.S. Baker Hughes Total Rig Count: Previous 563. Tracks the total number of active drilling rigs across the United States.
- 2:30 PM ET - CFTC Reports (weekly Commitments of Traders): Multiple releases detailing speculative net positions across a range of futures markets, with the following previous net positions cited in advance:
- S&P 500 Speculative Positions: Previous -220.8K
- Nasdaq 100 Speculative Positions: Previous -14.9K
- Gold Speculative Positions: Previous 176.0K
- Crude Oil Speculative Positions: Previous 155.9K
- Soybeans Speculative Positions: Previous 187.8K
- Corn Speculative Positions: Previous 199.9K
- Wheat Speculative Positions: Previous -40.8K
- Natural Gas Speculative Positions: Previous -186.1K
- Silver Speculative Positions: Previous 23.9K
- Copper Speculative Positions: Previous 78.8K
- Aluminium Speculative Net Positions: Previous 0.8K
Why traders will watch these releases
The University of Michigan readings give a near-term snapshot of consumer confidence and expectations, data that investors closely monitor for evidence of demand resilience or softening that might influence corporate revenue trajectories and consumption-driven sectors. The survey's current conditions and expectations components, along with one- and five-year inflation expectations, provide granular indicators for household outlooks on spending and prices.
Baker Hughes' rig counts serve as a timely indicator of drilling activity. The U.S. rig count and total rig count figures are routinely used by energy market participants as a gauge of upstream momentum and, indirectly, future oil supply dynamics.
The CFTC Commitments of Traders reports read out speculative net positions across a wide set of futures, from equity indices to base and precious metals, agricultural commodities, and energy. These weekly snapshots can signal shifts in the positioning of hedge funds and other speculative traders and are therefore referenced by market participants assessing momentum, liquidity, and potential crowded trades.
What to expect during the day
Market responses will depend on how the released readings compare with the forecasts and prior figures. The Michigan indexes include forecasted values and recent readings that market participants will use as benchmarks. The Baker Hughes rig figures are noted with their previous counts. The CFTC releases arrive with the prior week's net positions listed above, providing an immediate comparison point when the new numbers come out.
Given the concentration of related data on the same day, traders may recalibrate risk positions across sectors tied to consumer demand, energy activity, and commodities depending on the incoming prints.
Bottom line
Friday's calendar centers on consumer confidence, drilling activity, and speculative positioning. The Michigan survey will supply information on household sentiment and inflation expectations, the Baker Hughes counts will update drilling activity measures, and the CFTC Commitments of Traders will disclose how speculative traders are positioned across major futures markets. Together, these data points will offer market participants a compact but informative set of signals to digest ahead of the weekend.