Overview:
The S&P 500 closed at a record 7,599.96 on June 1, 2026, as AI-driven hardware names led large-cap indexes to their ninth consecutive weekly gain. Nvidia's 6.26% surge on its RTX Spark Superchip announcement at Computex anchored the session, with Dell +10.70% and HPE posting a stunning +30% after-hours move on 40% revenue growth. The Russell 2000's 0.47% decline and a VIX jump to 16.05 introduced a cautionary note beneath the headline strength, and Bank of America's Victoria Roloff maintained a
NEW YORK — The first trading session of June delivered exactly what the AI bull case demands: a product launch that reset valuation expectations, an earnings report that made consensus estimates look like a rounding error, and three major large-cap indexes closing at simultaneous all-time highs.
What Drove the Tape from Bell to Bell
The session opened with momentum already baked in. Nvidia’s Jensen Huang took the stage at Computex Taipei in the early hours and announced the RTX Spark Superchip — co-developed with Microsoft — calling it “the first completely re-engineered, reinvented line of PCs that has happened in 40 years.” That framing, whether entirely accurate or not, was enough to send Nvidia shares up more than 6% from the open and pull the entire semiconductor complex with it. Marvell Technology hit an all-time high, gaining 7.04%. Micron added 7%. Adobe tacked on 6.6%.
The Dow’s comparatively muted gain of 0.09% to 51,078.88 tells you something important about this rally’s architecture. It is not a broad-based economic recovery trade. It is an AI infrastructure trade, concentrated in a cohort of names that are either building the chips, selling the servers, or writing the software that runs on both. We examined whether the RTX Spark announcement justified a 5% move in Nvidia earlier today — the market answered with 6.26%.
Geopolitics complicated the picture. Iran’s threats to close the Strait of Hormuz sent Brent crude surging more than 4%, and reports from Iran’s Tasnim news agency triggered the spike. President Trump signaled optimism about peace negotiations, partially offsetting the headline shock, but energy’s intraday move added a layer of macro uncertainty that the VIX acknowledged — the fear gauge rose 4.77% to 16.05. The Iran risk to June’s rally is not theoretical: a sustained oil move above $100 would begin to complicate the Fed’s calculus and compress equity multiples.
The AI Hardware Divergence: Winners With a Wide Margin, Losers With a Warning
Dell Technologies finished the regular session up 10.70% to $465.96 before adding another 2.73% in after-hours trade. Morgan Stanley upgraded Dell to Buy from Neutral with a $214 price target — a figure that now looks conservative given today’s print, though it implied 53% upside from Friday’s close. Dell’s surge earlier this year was already a defining signal in the AI infrastructure race; today’s move compounds that thesis.
Salesforce gained 9.57% as a Dow component, contributing meaningfully to what little gain the blue-chip index managed. IBM added 7.60%. Oracle rose 9.9%. ServiceNow closed 9.24% higher. The pattern is consistent: anything touching enterprise AI infrastructure or AI-enabled software saw institutional buying of significant size.
The counterweight was small caps. The Russell 2000’s 0.47% decline to 2,905.76 is the clearest sign that today’s session was not a rising-tide event. Small caps are more sensitive to credit conditions, regional bank health, and domestic economic momentum — and none of those inputs are currently as favorable as the AI narrative. Manufacturing contraction data earlier this week reinforced the uneven nature of this expansion. The divergence between large-cap tech and small-cap cyclicals is widening, and that is not a signal a healthy bull market typically produces at record highs.
Berkshire Hathaway’s $8.5 billion all-cash acquisition of Taylor Morrison Home Corp. at $72.50 per share — a 24% premium to the 30-day average — drew attention as the first major capital allocation call from new CEO Greg Abel. Taylor Morrison jumped 22% intraday on the news. The homebuilder acquisition is a bet on long-duration housing demand, not AI — a reminder that the market’s most celebrated capital allocator sees value in places the momentum crowd is ignoring.
HPE and Credo: The After-Hours Data That Resets Tomorrow’s Open
If today’s session had a defining number, it came after the closing bell. Hewlett Packard Enterprise reported Q2 FY2026 revenue of $10.7 billion against a consensus estimate of $9.79 billion — a beat of nearly $920 million, or roughly 9.4% above expectations. Non-GAAP EPS came in at $0.79 versus an estimate of $0.54. AI orders and backlog nearly doubled year-over-year. Traditional server orders more than doubled. The stock, which had already gained 9.35% during the regular session, added 30% in after-hours trading as of 4:30 PM ET on volume of 75.6 million shares — 287% above its three-month average.
Q3 guidance of $11.5 billion to $12.1 billion in revenue was equally striking. The company raised its full-year revenue growth outlook to 29%-33% and guided networking segment growth of 72%-75%. These are not incremental revisions. They are a structural re-rating of what HPE’s business model can generate in an AI buildout environment.
Credo Technology delivered its own statement. Q4 FY2026 revenue hit $437 million, up 157% year-over-year, with non-GAAP EPS of $1.16 beating the $1.03 consensus. Gross margin held at 68.3% on a non-GAAP basis. Credo has beaten estimates by an average of 31.6% over its past four quarters. At some point, analysts will catch up — and when they do, the beat-driven volatility premium in the stock will compress. That is worth watching for anyone long the name into next quarter.
What Tomorrow Needs to Confirm — or Break
The S&P 500 closing at 7,599.96 on nine consecutive weeks of gains is a statistic that demands both acknowledgment and scrutiny. The question heading into this week was whether a ninth straight weekly win could survive June’s first test. Today says yes — but with asterisks. The VIX moved higher even as indexes hit records. The Russell lagged. Bank of America’s strategist is explicitly bearish at current levels. Jamie Dimon, speaking at the Reagan National Economic Forum last Thursday, warned that market risks may be underpriced and valuations “exuberant.” That is not a word Dimon uses casually.
Tomorrow brings HPE’s after-hours surge into price discovery at the open. If the stock holds anywhere near its after-hours level, it pulls the broader server and AI infrastructure complex with it. Friday’s May jobs report looms as the week’s defining macro event — a strong number kills near-term rate cut expectations, and a weak number reintroduces recession risk. Neither outcome is obviously bullish at 7,600 on the S&P.
AMC Entertainment’s 21.97% single-session gain on May attendance data showing 25.5 million admissions is a footnote — but an instructive one. When distressed consumer names start popping on attendance figures, it is either a genuine demand signal or a momentum-chasing artifact. Given AMC’s balance sheet history, the latter is the more defensible read.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 record close | 7,599.96 | Trend intact above 7,500; a close below that level snaps nine-week streak momentum |
| VIX closing level | 16.05 | Watch for a move above 18 — that level would signal institutional hedging is accelerating beneath the surface rally |
| HPE after-hours surge | +30% AH | A sustained open above $58 would confirm a sector re-rating; a fade to $48-$50 suggests short-squeeze exhaustion |
| Brent crude intraday high | ~$95.13 | A move above $100 on Hormuz escalation would begin compressing equity multiples and complicating Fed guidance |
| Broadcom Q2 earnings | PT: $490 | Susquehanna raised target to $490; AVGO print is the next binary event for AI semiconductor sentiment |
The record close is real. The AI demand data behind today’s moves is real. What is not yet resolved is whether the market’s ninth straight winning week reflects earnings power that has finally caught up to valuations — or valuations that have run ahead of earnings power that is still, for most of the S&P 500, catching up. That answer arrives gradually, one quarterly report at a time. This week, HPE provided a compelling data point. The rest of the tape will deliver its verdict across the remainder of June.
This article is published by PreMarket Daily for informational purposes only. Nothing here constitutes financial advice, investment recommendations, or an offer to buy or sell any securities. Always consult a qualified financial professional before making investment decisions.

