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June 5, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Nvidia shares plunged Friday as semiconductor stocks led a broad tech selloff triggered by disappointing guidance from Broadcom and stronger-than-expected May jobs data. The May nonfarm payroll report showed 172,000 jobs added—nearly double the forecast of 85,000—pushing Treasury yields higher and raising expectations for the Fed to maintain elevated rates longer. Chipmakers bore the brunt as investors rotated out of growth stocks into defensive positions, with the entire semiconductor sector down sharply on recession fears tied to higher borrowing costs.
US-Iran peace negotiations stalled Friday after Iran's Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said no meaningful progress had been made, contradicting President Trump's claims that talks were nearing completion. Iran-backed Hezbollah rejected a US-mediated ceasefire proposal between Israel and Lebanon, signaling hardline resistance to any deal. The impasse keeps the Strait of Hormuz closure risk alive, supporting elevated oil prices near $92-93/barrel despite weak global demand signals. WTI crude fell 2.8% Friday but remains up 6% for the week, reflecting the market's uncertainty about whether geopolitical tensions will ease or escalate. The stalled talks are a key headwind for growth stocks, as persistent energy price inflation keeps the Fed on hold and pressures corporate margins.
Fed Chair Kevin Warsh, who took office May 15, has signaled a more aggressive stance on inflation than Jerome Powell, emphasizing the need to wait for clear disinflation before cutting rates. Warsh's comments suggest the Fed may even consider rate hikes if inflation remains sticky above 3.5%, a hawkish pivot that has rattled markets. The April CPI print at 3.8% YoY and strong May jobs data have given Warsh ammunition to justify a prolonged pause. His leadership style is expected to be more data-dependent and less dovish than Powell's, which could mean higher rates for longer. This hawkish shift is a major headwind for growth stocks and crypto, both of which benefited from Powell's patient, accommodative approach.
Bank of America's Sell Side Indicator, which tracks recommended portfolio allocations among Wall Street strategists, ended May at its highest level since February 2025—a level that has historically preceded significant market corrections. The indicator suggests institutional money is overextended in bullish positioning, leaving little room for further upside and significant downside risk if sentiment shifts. Friday's selloff may be the beginning of a broader correction as investors realize the easy gains from the first half of 2026 are behind them. The combination of elevated valuations, hawkish Fed messaging, and deteriorating earnings guidance creates a perfect storm for a 5-10% pullback in the coming weeks.
US semiconductor stocks collapsed Friday after Broadcom issued weak forward guidance, triggering a cascade of selling across the entire chip sector. Nvidia fell 5.9%, Marvell Technology dropped 16%, and Micron plunged 13%, dragging the Nasdaq Composite down 4.2%—its worst session since April 2025. The selloff accelerated when the May jobs report landed: the US economy added 172,000 positions, nearly double the 85,000 forecast, with unemployment holding steady at 4.3%. This resilient labor market data shattered the market's last hope for near-term Fed rate cuts. The 10-year Treasury yield jumped 6 basis points to 4.55%, and the 2s/10s spread compressed to 38 basis points, signaling traders now expect rates to remain elevated through year-end. The VIX spiked 39.7% to 21.51 as volatility re-entered markets after months of complacency. Broadcom's weakness reflects broader concerns about AI capex cycles slowing and demand normalization, while the jobs surprise reinforces the Fed's hawkish stance: with inflation at 3.8% (highest since 2023) and employment strong, there's no urgency to cut rates. The combination of disappointing earnings guidance and macro headwinds has triggered a flight from growth into defensive sectors, with the S&P 500 down 2.6% and the Russell 2000 down 3.5%.
💡 WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital) — the discount rate used to value future cash flows in a company. When Treasury yields rise, WACC increases, reducing the present value of growth stocks that depend on distant future earnings. Duration — the sensitivity of a bond or stock to interest rate changes. Growth stocks have longer duration (more sensitive to rate moves) than value stocks, which is why they fell harder Friday.
Broadcom issued disappointing forward guidance Thursday evening, citing softer demand from major cloud customers who are pausing infrastructure spending. The company's warning that AI capex growth is decelerating sent shockwaves through the chip sector, as investors realized the torrid pace of AI-driven semiconductor demand may not be sustainable. Broadcom's weakness signals that hyperscalers (Amazon, Google, Microsoft) are digesting massive prior investments and pulling back on new orders, a structural shift that threatens the entire semiconductor supply chain. This is the first major crack in the AI narrative that has driven tech stocks higher all year, raising questions about whether valuations have gotten ahead of fundamentals.
Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang announced a new line of AI-optimized processors for Windows-based personal computers at Computex in Taipei on June 1, marking the company's first major push into consumer AI hardware. The chips are designed to run AI models locally on laptops, reducing dependence on cloud infrastructure and opening a massive new market. However, the timing is telling: Nvidia's pivot to consumer PCs comes as data center demand shows signs of moderating, with Broadcom's weak guidance suggesting hyperscalers are pulling back on infrastructure spending. The PC chip announcement represents both an opportunity (billions of new devices) and an admission that the data center gold rush may be cooling.
SpaceX began its IPO roadshow this week with Morningstar analysts valuing the company at $780 billion—less than half of what Elon Musk is reportedly targeting. The valuation gap reflects investor skepticism about SpaceX's AI business (xAI) and satellite internet prospects, which remain unproven at scale. Musk's ambitions for SpaceX's AI division and Starlink's profitability are priced in at a premium that the market is not yet willing to pay. The IPO will be a key test of whether mega-cap tech valuations have room to expand or if the market is finally applying discipline to growth-at-any-cost narratives.
Bitcoin plunged to $60,718 Friday, marking a 19-month low as the tech selloff and rising Treasury yields triggered a flight from all risk assets. Ethereum fell 2.4% to $1,676, and Solana crashed 4.0% to $62, with the entire crypto complex down sharply. The selloff reflects a critical shift in market structure: crypto is no longer trading as a hedge or alternative asset class, but as a leveraged bet on growth and low rates. With the Fed now expected to hold rates elevated through year-end and inflation sticky at 3.8%, the macro backdrop that supported crypto's 2026 rally has evaporated. The sharp decline suggests capitulation may be near, but further downside is possible if the Fed signals a hawkish hold at the June 16-17 meeting.
Despite Solana's price collapse to $62 (down 78% from its January $295 peak), the blockchain is experiencing explosive institutional adoption. Solana captured 97% of cumulative tokenized equities spot trading volume and hit a record 200,000 on-chain tokenized stock holders. SoFi launched SoFiUSD—the first stablecoin from a US nationally chartered bank—on Solana, while Cash App added USDC support on the network. This divergence between price and adoption is significant: it suggests institutional players are building infrastructure on Solana despite retail capitulation, a pattern that historically precedes price recovery. The network's Alpenglow upgrade (targeting mainnet rollout later in 2026) promises near-instant finality and improved performance, potentially unlocking new use cases in high-frequency DeFi.
Scientists at the University of Chicago discovered that octopuses possess chemoreceptors throughout their arms that allow them to taste food directly through their skin, without sending signals to their central brain. This means an octopus can identify whether something is edible by touching it, a form of distributed intelligence that's fundamentally different from how human sensory systems work. The finding reveals that octopuses have evolved a decentralized nervous system where each arm can make independent decisions about what to eat, essentially giving them nine brains instead of one. This distributed cognition may explain why octopuses are so adaptable and intelligent—they can process sensory information and make decisions at the limb level, freeing up their central brain for higher-order problem-solving. It's a reminder that intelligence takes many forms, and nature has solved the problem of sensory processing in ways that are radically different from our own.