Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-09
The major indices delivered a sharply divergent week, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite plunging 4.3% while the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.3% gain.
Weekly Stock Market Summary — 2026-06-09
Date: 2026-06-09 Coverage: Week ending 2026-06-05 + week ahead
1. Weekly Recap
The major indices delivered a sharply divergent week, with the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite plunging 4.3% while the Dow Jones Industrial Average eked out a 0.3% gain. The S&P 500 fell 2.3%, dragged lower by a brutal selloff in technology and consumer cyclical names. The dominant theme was a violent rotation out of growth and into defensive sectors, as rising geopolitical tensions and a hawkish repricing of interest rates rattled the most rate-sensitive parts of the market.
What worked was healthcare, real estate, and financials — sectors that offer either stability or benefit from higher yields. UnitedHealth surged 9.4% and Eli Lilly jumped 7.7%, while JPMorgan and Bank of America each rose over 3%. What broke was everything tied to tech and discretionary spending: Broadcom cratered 19.3%, AMD fell 11.9%, and Oracle dropped 9.2%. The macro backdrop was dominated by a sharp backup in Treasury yields — the 10-year yield rose 10 basis points to 4.55% — and a 3.3% weekly decline in gold, which fell below its 200-day moving average for the first time in months.
The volatility regime shifted meaningfully. The VIX surged 18.2% to 18.98, closing above both its 50- and 200-day moving averages. The week started with the S&P 500 near 7,550 and ended near 7,379, with the selloff accelerating after the May jobs report on Friday showed a still-tight labor market, reinforcing the "higher for longer" rate narrative. The US Dollar Index edged up 0.3% to 99.8, adding to pressure on commodities and emerging markets.
2. Indices, Vol & Yields
| Index/Asset | Price | Weekly % | YTD % |
|---|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 | 7,378.63 | -2.3% | 7.6% |
| Nasdaq Composite | 25,704.81 | -4.3% | 10.6% |
| Dow Jones Industrial | 50,815.54 | 0.3% | 5.0% |
| Russell 2000 | 2,868.84 | -0.9% | 14.4% |
| CBOE Volatility Index (VIX) | 18.98 | 18.2% | 30.8% |
| Gold (SPDR GLD) | 394.22 | -3.3% | -1.0% |
| US Dollar Index (DXY) | 99.80 | 0.3% | 1.4% |
| Treasury Yield | Current | Weekly Change |
|---|---|---|
| 2-Year | 4.17% | +0.19% |
| 10-Year | 4.55% | +0.10% |
| 30-Year | 5.01% | +0.02% |
3. Sector Rotation
| Sector | Weekly % | Read |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare | 0.19% | Defensive haven — investors sought safety in pharma and managed care |
| Real Estate | -0.05% | Resilient despite higher yields; REITs held up better than growth |
| Financial Services | -0.18% | Banks benefited from steepening yield curve and strong loan demand |
| Consumer Defensive | -0.21% | Staples held firm as a safe-haven trade |
| Utilities | -1.06% | Moderate selling as yields rose, but less severe than cyclicals |
| Basic Materials | -1.12% | Commodity-linked weakness on dollar strength and demand fears |
| Communication Services | -1.41% | Mixed — Google gained but Meta and Disney dragged |
| Industrials | -2.03% | Broad-based selling on growth slowdown concerns |
| Consumer Cyclical | -4.13% | Brutal week as rate-sensitive discretionary names were hammered |
| Technology | -4.51% | The epicenter of the selloff; semis and software crushed |
| Energy | -5.64% | Oil prices fell on demand worries and geopolitical uncertainty |
The rotation was unmistakably risk-off. Healthcare was the only sector in positive territory, while Technology and Energy were the worst hit. The steepening yield curve (2s10s widened to 38 bps from 47 bps the prior week) punished long-duration growth stocks while benefiting financials. This is a classic "growth scare" rotation — investors are pricing in slower economic growth but sticky inflation, a stagflationary mix that favors defensives and banks over tech.
4. Top Movers of the Week
Winners (Top 5)
| Ticker | Weekly % | YTD % |
|---|---|---|
| UNH | 9.4% | 22.6% |
| LLY | 7.7% | 7.5% |
| PG | 5.1% | 3.9% |
| JNJ | 4.9% | 12.9% |
| MRK | 4.2% | 12.3% |
UnitedHealth led the pack after the company announced strong enrollment numbers for its Medicare Advantage plans. Eli Lilly continued its monster run on GLP-1 drug momentum, while Procter & Gamble and Johnson & Johnson benefited from the defensive rotation.
Losers (Bottom 5)
| Ticker | Weekly % | YTD % |
|---|---|---|
| AVGO | -19.3% | 11.2% |
| AMD | -11.9% | 113.8% |
| ORCL | -9.2% | 6.9% |
| CRM | -7.2% | -30.3% |
| TSLA | -5.8% | -8.9% |
Broadcom was the week's biggest loser after reporting disappointing guidance tied to enterprise spending slowdown. AMD fell despite its massive YTD gains, as profit-taking hit the semiconductor sector hard. Oracle and Salesforce both suffered on software spending concerns, while Tesla continued its slide amid broader EV demand worries and the "Elon premium" being tested.
5. Earnings Recap
| Ticker | Beat/Miss | EPS Actual vs Est | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|---|---|
| DOCU | Beat | $1.09 vs $0.99 | Strong quarter driven by higher-than-expected subscription revenue growth |
No major earnings with reported actuals in the window beyond DocuSign, which delivered a clean beat.
6. Macro & News Themes
- Labor market remains tight but showing cracks: The May jobs report is expected Friday, but April JOLTS data showed job openings surged to 7.6 million (highest in nearly two years). However, long-term unemployment is surging, and a New York Fed survey showed household financial worries hit the highest level since July 2022.
- Geopolitical escalation: The US and Iran intensified attacks as a ceasefire frays and peace talks stall. This pushed euro zone inflation to 3.2% on higher energy costs and kept oil markets on edge.
- Trade war escalation: The US proposed fresh tariffs on 60 economies over forced labor trade practices, adding to global trade uncertainty and weighing on industrials and materials.
- Yields spike on hawkish repricing: The 2-year yield surged 19 bps to 4.17% as markets priced out rate cuts. The 10-year hit 4.55%, its highest level in weeks.
- Gold breaks down: Gold fell 3.3% and closed below its 200-day moving average for the first time since late 2024, as the stronger dollar and higher real yields crushed the precious metal.
- Private payrolls beat: ADP reported 122,000 private sector jobs added in May, above expectations, reinforcing the "no rush to cut" narrative.
- OpenAI IPO filing: Markets are digesting the implications of a potential OpenAI IPO, which could reshape the AI landscape and impact incumbent tech names.
7. Stock of the Week
UnitedHealth Group (UNH) — +9.4% Weekly
UnitedHealth was the standout winner in a week defined by defensive rotation. The managed care giant surged after reporting strong Medicare Advantage enrollment figures for the upcoming plan year, signaling that the company is successfully navigating the regulatory and cost environment that had weighed on the sector earlier in 2026. The move pushed UNH well above its 50-day moving average of $355.42 and its 200-day of $330.04, confirming a powerful uptrend.
For retail investors, UNH represents a classic "quality at a reasonable price" play in a market that is increasingly favoring stability over growth. The company's diversified revenue streams — spanning health insurance, pharmacy benefits, and healthcare services — provide a buffer against economic uncertainty. However, the stock is now trading at a premium valuation, and any negative regulatory headlines around Medicare Advantage reimbursement rates could trigger a sharp reversal. Investors should consider dollar-cost averaging rather than chasing the breakout, and keep a stop-loss near the 50-day moving average.
8. Week Ahead — Catalysts
Earnings: No major earnings with reported actuals in the upcoming window.
Economic Data: data unavailable (not in current feeds)
Other Catalysts:
- The May jobs report release on Friday will be the week's most important data point — a strong number could further pressure rate-cut expectations, while a miss could spark a relief rally in bonds and growth stocks.
- Ongoing US-Iran ceasefire negotiations will be closely watched for any de-escalation that could lower oil prices and ease inflation fears.
- The OpenAI IPO filing process will continue to generate headlines and could impact AI-related stocks.
9. Levels to Watch
- S&P 500 (7,378.63): Above its 50-DMA (7,194.73) and 200-DMA (6,868.35). The 7,200 level is key support — a break below the 50-DMA would signal a deeper correction.
- Nasdaq (25,704.81): Above its 50-DMA (24,958.57) and 200-DMA (23,369.04). The 25,000 round number is the first line of defense; a close below it would be bearish.
- Dow (50,815.54): Well above its 50-DMA (49,280.51) and 200-DMA (47,951.36). The 50,000 level is psychological support.
- Russell 2000 (2,868.84): Above its 50-DMA (2,774.58) and 200-DMA (2,577.68). Small caps are holding up better than large-cap tech, which is a constructive sign.
- VIX (18.98): Closed above its 50-DMA (18.38) and 200-DMA (18.56). A sustained move above 20 would indicate panic selling.
- Gold (394.22): Below its 50-DMA (424.16) and 200-DMA (405.56). This is a major breakdown — the next support is the $380 area.
- 10-Year Yield (4.55%): Above its 50-DMA (data unavailable). A move above 4.60% would be a significant breakout and could trigger another leg lower in equities.
10. Sources
- Household worries over finances hit highest level since July 2022, New York Fed survey shows
- The May jobs report will be released Friday. Here's what to expect
- Long-term unemployment is surging in the U.S. There are hidden costs for workers and the economy
- Private payrolls grew by 122,000 in May, stronger than expected, ADP reports
- U.S. proposes fresh tariffs on 60 economies over forced labor trade practices
- U.S., Iran intensify attacks as ceasefire frays, peace talks stall
- Job openings in April surged to 7.6 million, the highest in nearly two years
- Inflation hits 3.2% in the euro zone as Iran war pushes energy costs higher
- UK reviewing Palantir's NHS contract amid pressure to use break clause
- Bank of America could exceed 15% market revenue growth in Q2
- Boeing delivers 60 jets in May, up 33% from year earlier
- Morgan Stanley tracks residential investment up after May home sales
- Analysis-SpaceX's lofty valuation set to put 'Elon premium' to test
- Stocks mixed as traders digest cooling Israel-Iran tensions, OpenAI IPO filing
Data Sources: Yahoo Finance, Financial Modeling Prep, U.S. Treasury
Disclaimer: For educational purposes only. Not investment advice. Do your own research.
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