Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-08
The melt-up finally broke. After nine straight up weeks, the longest streak since 2023, the S&P 500 logged its first losing week in ten, closing Friday June 5 at 7,383.74 (−2.64% on the week).
Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-08
Date: 2026-06-08 Coverage: Week ending Friday + Week ahead
1. Weekly Recap
The melt-up finally broke. After nine straight up weeks, the longest streak since 2023, the S&P 500 logged its first losing week in ten, closing Friday June 5 at 7,383.74 (−2.64% on the week). The damage was concentrated in technology: the Nasdaq Composite fell 4.18% to 25,709.43, while the Dow was far more resilient, slipping just ~0.3% to 50,866.78 as money rotated out of mega-cap growth and into value and defensives. The split tape — a barely-scratched Dow next to a Nasdaq down more than 4% — is the whole story of the week in one line.
It started fine. The S&P actually printed a fresh high above 7,600 on Monday June 1 as the AI bid carried over from May. Then the floor gave way Friday in a single-session rout that erased roughly $1.3 trillion from semiconductor and AI-related stocks — the Nasdaq's worst day since the April 2025 tariff shock. Two things broke at once. First, Broadcom's earnings disappointed the AI bulls: its AI-networking revenue came in around $4.1B versus ~$4.8B expected (a 14% miss) and management left full-year AI-chip targets unchanged, puncturing the "capex only goes up" narrative that had powered the rally. Broadcom fell ~14%, Nvidia ~6% (shedding ~$740B in value), AMD ~11%, and Micron ~7%. Second, the May jobs report ran hot — employers added 172,000 jobs, roughly double the ~85K consensus, with unemployment holding at 4.3%.
That payroll surprise flipped the macro script. Instead of "the Fed can cut," the bond market started pricing "the Fed may have to hike." Treasury yields jumped — the 10-year rose to 4.55% and the 2-year to 4.17%, its highest since February 2025 — and futures now imply roughly a 50% chance of a rate increase by year-end. Higher discount rates are kryptonite for long-duration growth multiples, so the most expensive corner of the market got hit hardest. Adding to the unease, both Meta (−5%) and Alphabet signaled large equity raises to fund AI ambitions, reminding investors that the AI build-out is getting more capital-hungry, not less. Safe havens didn't help: with real yields climbing and the dollar firming (DXY +0.65% Friday), gold fell ~3.3% to ~$4,340/oz, erasing its 2026 gains, and silver dropped over 7%.
Step back and the week reads as a regime test, not a crash. Breadth held up far better than the headline indices — about 55% of S&P 500 stocks remain above their 50-day average and 59% above their 200-day — because this was a narrow, top-heavy de-leveraging of the AI trade rather than a broad breakdown. The VIX spiked from a complacent 15 to 21.5, then began easing, and Monday June 8 opened with a sharp relief rally (S&P +1%, Nasdaq +1.8%, semis bouncing double digits). The question into next week is simple and binary: Wednesday's May CPI either confirms the hot-jobs inflation scare and validates the hawkish repricing, or cools it and lets the dip-buyers finish the job.
2. Indices, Vol & Yields
| Index / Asset | Friday Close | Weekly Change % | YTD % (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 (^GSPC) | 7,383.74 | −2.64% | ~+8.5% |
| Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) | 25,709.43 | −4.18% | ~+11.5% |
| Dow Jones (^DJI) | 50,866.78 | ~−0.3% | ~+8.5% |
| Russell 2000 (^RUT) | 2,833.50 | ~−1.5% (est.) | ~+4% |
| VIX (^VIX) | 21.51 | ↑ from ~15.3 (+40%) | — |
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | 4.55% | ↑ ~10 bp | — |
| 2-Year Treasury Yield | 4.17% | ↑ (highest since Feb '25) | — |
| 30-Year Treasury Yield | 5.01% | ↑ | — |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | ~99–100 (est.) | ↑ ~0.65% (Fri) | — |
| Gold (spot) | ~$4,340/oz | ~−4% to −5% | ~flat YTD |
Confirmed: S&P/Nasdaq/Dow/Russell closes and VIX come from live FMP index quotes (Friday June 5 closing prints) cross-checked against TheStreet, CNBC and Yahoo Finance coverage. Yields are from the June 5 Treasury snapshot (Advisor Perspectives / ETF Trends). YTD figures are derived from Slickcharts total-return readings as of May 29 (S&P +11.3%, Nasdaq +16.3%) less the week's decline, so treat them as price-return approximations. DXY and Russell weekly change marked "(est.)." Monday June 8 is rebounding as of this writing; this report covers the week that ended Friday.
3. Sector Rotation
| Sector | Weekly % (approx.) | Driver |
|---|---|---|
| Financials | +~0.5% | Higher yields / steeper curve = better bank NIM; rotation destination |
| Health Care | +~0.3% | Defensive bid; money left growth for safety |
| Consumer Staples | +~0.2% | Classic risk-off rotation into defensives |
| Energy | +~0.2% | Iran tensions + firm crude; YTD leadership group |
| Utilities | ~flat | Mixed — bond-proxy hurt by higher yields, but defensive bid offsets |
| Materials | ~flat | Commodity strength vs. growth-scare drag |
| Industrials | −~0.5% | Held up relatively; cyclical, less duration-sensitive |
| Real Estate | −~1% | Rate-sensitive; the 10Y back to 4.55% pressured |
| Consumer Discretionary | −~3% | Mega-cap heavy (AMZN/TSLA) caught in the growth unwind |
| Communication Services | −~3% | Meta −5% on equity-raise news; Alphabet dilution fears |
| Technology | −~5% to −6% | Epicenter — Broadcom AI miss triggered a ~$1.3T semiconductor rout |
Interpretation. A textbook risk-off, value-over-growth, defensive rotation — the mirror image of the prior nine weeks. Technology and the AI-adjacent groups (Comm Services, mega-cap Discretionary) were dumped, while Financials, Health Care, Staples and Energy absorbed the flows. The tell is the Dow's ~0.3% weekly loss against the Nasdaq's −4.2%: this was a de-rating of expensive long-duration growth on a hawkish rate shock, not a growth-scare flight from cyclicals. Financials leading makes sense — higher yields and a steeper curve help bank margins — and the YTD cyclical leaders (Energy +21.5%, Materials +17.6%, Industrials +12.3%) kept their footing while the Magnificent Seven took the brunt. The risk is symmetry: a soft CPI Wednesday could snap this rotation back toward growth just as fast as it set up.
4. Top Movers of the Week
Winners (relative — where money rotated)
| Ticker | Name | Weekly % | Catalyst |
|---|---|---|---|
| XLF | Financials Select Sector | +~0.5% (est.) | Higher yields/steeper curve lift bank net interest margins |
| JPM | JPMorgan Chase | +~1% (est.) | Rate-sensitive money-center bank; rotation beneficiary |
| CVX | Chevron | +~1% (est.) | Energy leadership + Iran premium; defensive 4.5% yield |
| XLV | Health Care Select Sector | +~0.3% (est.) | Defensive ballast as growth was sold |
| KO | Coca-Cola | +~1% (est.) | Staples safe-haven bid in a risk-off tape |
Losers
| Ticker | Name | Weekly % | Catalyst |
|---|---|---|---|
| AVGO | Broadcom | ~−14%+ | AI-networking rev ~$4.1B missed ~$4.8B; FY AI targets left unchanged — the trigger |
| AMD | Advanced Micro Devices | ~−11% | Caught in the chip rout; closed ~$466 Friday |
| NVDA | NVIDIA | ~−6%+ | ~$740B of value erased; AI-bellwether dragged the whole complex |
| MU | Micron | ~−7% | Memory/AI name swept up in the semiconductor slide (Fri close ~$1,004) |
| META | Meta Platforms | ~−5% | Reports of a large equity raise to fund AI — dilution fears |
Loser figures are well-documented single-day/weekly moves from TheStreet, CNBC, Yahoo Finance and Seeking Alpha coverage of the June 5 rout. The "Winners" are relative outperformers in a down week — money rotated into financials, healthcare, staples and energy — and the percentages are approximate, directional estimates rather than precise closes.
5. Earnings Recap
| Ticker | Beat / Miss | Reaction | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| AVGO | Mixed — rev OK, AI guide light | ~−14% | AI-networking ~$4.1B vs ~$4.8B est; FY AI-chip target unchanged — the spark for the whole rout |
| NVDA | n/a (sympathy) | ~−6% Fri | No news of its own; punished as the AI-trade proxy |
| AMD | n/a (sympathy) | ~−11% | Highest-beta large-cap AI name; led the downside |
| MU | n/a (sympathy) | ~−7% | Memory/AI read-through from Broadcom |
| CRWD | In-line to soft (prior wk slate) | mixed | Cybersecurity spend steady but not enough to offset macro |
| ORCL | Reports next week (Jun 10) | — | The market's next AI-capex verdict after Broadcom |
A light earnings slate, but Broadcom's print was the single most consequential corporate event of the week — it set off the chip slide that defined the tape.
6. Macro & News Themes
- The 9-week win streak ended. The S&P 500's first down week in ten (−2.64%) and the Nasdaq's worst day (−4.2%) since the April 2025 tariff shock; ~$1.3T erased from semis/AI in one session.
- Hot jobs flipped the Fed script. May payrolls of 172K roughly doubled the ~85K consensus (unemployment 4.3%), pushing markets to price ~50% odds of a rate hike by year-end rather than a cut.
- Yields surged. 10-year to 4.55%, 2-year to 4.17% (highest since Feb 2025), 30-year to ~5.01% — the proximate cause of the growth-multiple compression.
- Broadcom punctured the AI-capex narrative. An AI-revenue miss and an unchanged full-year AI target re-rated the entire "AI plumbing" cohort lower; "AI fatigue" became the phrase of the week.
- AI build-out is getting capital-hungry. Both Meta and Alphabet signaled large equity raises to fund AI — a reminder that the spend is accelerating, with dilution risk attached.
- Safe havens didn't work. With real yields rising and the dollar firming, gold fell
3.3% ($4,340/oz, erasing 2026 gains) and silver dropped >7% — a "sell everything but cash" Friday. - Inflation is the swing factor. A broad commodity index is +40% year-over-year on Iran/energy pressure; Wednesday's May CPI (core ~2.8% expected) is now the most important print on the calendar.
- Breadth held. ~55% of S&P names above their 50-day and ~59% above their 200-day — the selloff was a narrow mega-cap de-leveraging, not a broad market breakdown.
7. Stock of the Week — Broadcom (AVGO)
What happened. Broadcom reported fiscal-Q2 results and became the pin that popped a nine-week melt-up. Revenue was fine, but the number that mattered — AI-networking revenue of roughly $4.1 billion against a ~$4.8 billion consensus, a 14% miss — and management's decision to leave full-year AI-chip targets unchanged told a market priced for perpetual upward revisions exactly what it did not want to hear. The stock fell ~14%, dragged Nvidia (−6%), AMD (−11%) and Micron (−7%) with it, and helped erase an estimated $1.3 trillion from semiconductor and AI-linked equities in a single Friday session.
Broader implication. For two months the bull case was a one-way ratchet: every hyperscaler print and every chip guide stepped higher, so "AI capex re-accelerating" became the market's load-bearing assumption. Broadcom didn't refute that thesis — its AI business is still enormous and growing — but it failed to raise, and in a market priced for raises, flat is a miss. Coming the same week that Meta and Alphabet flagged dilutive equity raises to fund AI, it reframed the trade: the AI build-out is real but increasingly capital-intensive, lumpy, and no longer a guaranteed beat-and-raise. Layered on top of a hot jobs report and a hawkish rate repricing, that was enough to trigger the first genuine de-leveraging of the AI complex since the rally began.
Is it still actionable? Cautiously, and only for the patient. The long-term AI-infrastructure thesis is intact — Broadcom is a core custom-silicon and networking beneficiary — but the stock just told you the expectations bar had gotten too high, and that bar resets slowly. The risks are concrete: the multiple was rich, the AI-capex cycle may be entering a more volatile "show-me" phase, and a 4.55% 10-year keeps pressuring every high-multiple growth name. For a retail investor, the lower-risk way to own this is a diversified semiconductor or broad-tech vehicle on weakness, dollar-cost-averaged — not chasing a single name through what may be a multi-week reset. Watch Oracle (June 10) for the next read on whether the AI-capex story is cooling or just catching its breath.
8. Week Ahead — Catalysts to Watch
Earnings (June 8–12, 2026)
| Date | Ticker | Time | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wed Jun 10 | ORCL (Oracle) | AMC | The marquee print — Q4 EPS est ~$1.96 (+15.3% YoY); the next AI-cloud-capex verdict after Broadcom's miss |
| Thu Jun 11 | ADBE (Adobe) | AMC | Q2 EPS est ~$5.83 / rev ~$6.45B; $25B buyback in place; a test of AI monetization in software |
| Tue–Thu | Misc (Chewy, GameStop-type slate) | various | Light week; consumer/retail color around the majors |
Economic Data
| Date | Time (ET) | Event | Consensus | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wed Jun 10 | 8:30 | May CPI (headline + core) | core ~+2.8% YoY | The week's main event — confirms or cools the hot-jobs inflation scare and the hike narrative |
| Wed Jun 10 | 1:00 | 10-Year Treasury auction | — | Demand test with the 10Y at 4.55% post-jobs |
| Thu Jun 11 | 8:30 | PPI (May) + Initial Jobless Claims | — | Pipeline inflation + labor read the day after CPI |
| Thu Jun 11 | 1:00 | 30-Year Treasury auction | — | Long-end appetite with the 30Y at ~5.0% |
| Fri Jun 12 | 10:00 | UMich Consumer Sentiment (prelim) | — | Inflation expectations are the watched sub-component |
Other Catalysts
- Fed blackout: the FOMC meets June 16–17, so the Fed is in its pre-meeting quiet period this week — no speakers to jawbone the rate-hike repricing. CPI does the talking.
- CPI is binary: a hot core print validates Friday's hike scare and pressures growth again; an in-line/soft print hands the dip-buyers a green light. Expect an outsized reaction either way.
- Oracle as the AI tell: after Broadcom, a strong ORCL cloud/RPO guide would reassure the AI complex; a soft one extends the "AI fatigue" theme.
- Iran / oil headlines continue to swing energy and the inflation narrative (commodities +40% YoY).
9. Levels to Watch
- S&P 500 — 7,383 (Friday close) / 7,156 (50-day MA): the 50-day near 7,150 is the first real support. Holding it keeps the uptrend intact; a decisive break opens air toward ~7,000.
- S&P 500 — 7,600–7,620 (record/resistance): the June 1 high. Reclaiming it would signal the dip was just a shakeout.
- Nasdaq Composite — 25,709 / ~24,700 (50-day): the epicenter of the selloff; bulls need the 50-day to hold. 27,190 is the high to recapture.
- VIX — 20 / 25: above 20 flags an active risk-off regime; a slide back below ~17–18 (Monday is heading that way) says calm is returning. A spike above 25 on a hot CPI would signal real stress.
- 10-Year yield — 4.55% / 4.68%: a push above the ~4.68% May high (on a hot CPI) would pressure multiples further; back below 4.45% is relief for growth and rate-sensitives.
- 2-Year yield — 4.17%: the cleanest "Fed-hike" gauge — a break higher confirms the market is pricing tightening; a fade eases the whole growth-multiple squeeze.
- Semis (SMH / SOX): watch for stabilization after the ~$1.3T washout — Monday's double-digit bounce in MU/MRVL is the first test of whether buyers step back in.
10. Sources
- Stock Market Today (June 5, 2026): Nasdaq falls 4% as semiconductor slide wipes $1T from markets — TheStreet
- Nasdaq falls 4% and suffers worst day since April 2025 as traders flee chip stocks — CNBC
- Stock market today: Nasdaq plunges 4%, Dow and S&P 500 sink as AI trade halts on Fed hike bets — Yahoo Finance
- Stock Market Today, June 4: Broadcom Shares Plunge After AI Outlook Misses High Investor Expectations — The Motley Fool
- Over $1T erased as chip selloff impacts Nvidia, Broadcom — Seeking Alpha
- Week Ahead: CPI, Oracle Earnings and the Chip Selloff — HeyGoTrade
- Earnings Calendar and Analysis for This Week (June 8-12) — Kiplinger
- Treasury Yields Snapshot: June 5, 2026 — Advisor Perspectives
- Gold and silver tumble after hot jobs print lifts dollar, Treasury yields — Kitco
- These 3 Sectors Are Crushing Tech in 2026 — Yahoo Finance
- S&P 500 / Nasdaq 100 YTD Return — Slickcharts
For Educational Purposes Only. Not investment advice. Do your own research.
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