Overview:
The S&P 500 reached 7,615.12 by 1:30 PM ET Tuesday, a 0.20% gain anchored almost entirely by semiconductor strength after Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang publicly endorsed Marvell Technology as a future trillion-dollar company, sending the stock up 25%. HPE's 27.2% surge following a beat-and-raise earnings report added fuel to the technology sector's 2.77% advance. Alphabet's slide on an $80 billion stock-sale plan and broad weakness in utilities, consumer cyclical, and real estate sectors indicate the
NEW YORK — The S&P 500 sits at 7,615.12 midday Tuesday — up a modest 0.20% from Monday’s close — but the headline number is doing almost no work in describing what is actually happening on the tape today.
The Nasdaq Composite gained 0.20% to 27,140.75. The Dow Jones Industrial Average added 0.23% to 51,194.70. The Russell 2000 outperformed at +0.79%, a data point worth watching given small-caps typically need genuine risk appetite — not just mega-cap momentum — to sustain a move.
A CEO’s Words and an Earnings Report Are Moving More Than the Fed Could
Two catalysts are defining Tuesday’s session, and neither of them comes from Washington. Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang told an audience that Marvell Technology could become the next trillion-dollar company, triggering a 25% surge in Marvell shares and pulling the broader semiconductor index up roughly 5.9%. Magnachip Semiconductor rode the coattails higher, adding 21.9%. The move is extraordinary in isolation, but it fits a pattern: the AI infrastructure trade has conditioned markets to respond violently to any signal — however informal — from the architects of the buildout.
Separately, Hewlett Packard Enterprise surged 27.2% after posting current-quarter earnings and revenue guidance that beat estimates while raising full-year earnings guidance. HPE’s year-to-date gain now stands at 149%, a run that would have seemed implausible twelve months ago. The company has clearly captured enterprise AI infrastructure spending in a way that was not priced in at the start of the year, and this quarter’s beat-and-raise structure — guidance going up, not just meeting the bar — is the highest-quality earnings signal a company can send.
The broader earnings backdrop supports the optimism. S&P 500 companies reported nearly 29% annual earnings-per-share growth last quarter, the strongest in more than four years and more than double what analysts had forecast as recently as March 31. Wall Street now expects 20% year-over-year earnings growth for the current quarter and the second half of 2026, per FactSet data. That is an aggressive number. If macro conditions shift even modestly — a credit event, a geopolitical flare — those estimates become the vulnerability, not the support.
The JOLTS print landed this morning with unexpected force. April job openings of 7.62 million demolished the consensus estimate of 6.866 million and blew past the prior month’s revised 6.89 million. The labor market data complicates the Fed’s calculus significantly, suggesting the economy absorbed trade-war uncertainty with considerably more resilience than policymakers had modeled. For traders, this is a double-edged print: strong jobs data confirms corporate revenue capacity, but it also delays the easing cycle that has been a structural tailwind for equity multiples. We have covered the tension between labor strength and Fed timing in detail here — Tuesday’s JOLTS data sharpens that debate considerably.
The Movers the Headline Number Is Hiding
The tape’s gains are real but extraordinarily concentrated. Strip out Marvell, HPE, and the handful of semiconductor names riding Huang’s endorsement, and the session looks materially different. Application software shares fell approximately 3% as a group, with ODDITY Tech collapsing 30.3% — the kind of single-session move that typically follows a guidance cut or a significant earnings miss — and Verra Mobility dropping 15.9%. Biotechnology stocks slid roughly 2.5%, led by Greenwich LifeSciences off 16.4% and Praxis Precision Medicines down 12.3%.
Alphabet is the other significant drag. The company announced an $80 billion stock-sale plan, sending shares lower and pulling communication services down 1.28% as the day’s second-worst performing sector. The math is straightforward: $80 billion in planned equity issuance is supply overhang, full stop. Whether the market absorbs it cleanly depends on how much of the issuance is timed against buyback offsets — that detail matters for anyone trading GOOGL into the close.
Victoria’s Secret provided a cleaner narrative. The retailer raised its full-year sales guidance to a range of $7.03 billion to $7.13 billion — up from the prior $6.85 billion to $6.95 billion range — after beating fiscal first-quarter earnings expectations. Management cited lower tariff costs as a direct driver of the upward revision. That is a data point that cuts across the consumer sector: if tariff relief is flowing through to retailer margins, the consumer discretionary collapse today (down 2.11%) may be driven by stock-specific disappointments rather than sector-wide deterioration.
The AI infrastructure story remains the dominant market narrative of 2026. As we analyzed when Broadcom reset expectations with its AI forecast, the sector has demonstrated an ability to sustain elevated multiples as long as revenue growth continues to validate the spending cycle. Tuesday’s Marvell move is the latest chapter — but Huang’s endorsement is not a contract announcement. Traders should treat it as a catalyst that opens a window, not one that closes the argument about valuation.
Where the Afternoon Sets Up
The final two hours of trading carry several watch points. The S&P 500 holding above 7,600 through the close would extend Monday’s gains and confirm the index remains in constructive territory following last week’s nine-week winning streak. A drift below that level — particularly if semiconductor names give back intraday gains — would suggest today’s strength was a rotation vehicle rather than a broad-based advance. The question of whether outsized individual earnings beats can sustain a cautious broader market has been a recurring theme this season, and Tuesday offers another real-time test.
The JOLTS data’s full implication for the rate outlook will filter through bond markets into the afternoon. Watch the 10-year yield closely — any meaningful move higher on the strong labor print could pressure the rate-sensitive sectors already underperforming today: utilities are down 2.51%, real estate off 1.16%. Those sectors were already lagging; a yield spike accelerates the pain. June’s early macro picture has been a mixed bag of signals, and the labor market’s resilience is the variable that now most directly affects the Fed’s timeline.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 Support | 7,600 | Close below this level signals today’s strength is concentrated, not broad-based |
| Marvell Intraday Hold | +25% | Fading below +15% into the close reduces confidence the Huang endorsement has legs beyond one session |
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | Watch post-JOLTS | A move higher on strong labor data pressures utilities and real estate — both already down sharply |
| Alphabet (GOOGL) | $80B issuance | Monitor for buyback offset language; without it, supply overhang likely persists through the week |
| April JOLTS Openings | 7.62M | Beat of 760K vs estimates narrows Fed cut window; watch rate-sensitive sectors for afternoon drift lower |
The afternoon setup is one of the more interesting of the year: strong earnings catalysts and a powerful AI endorsement headline giving the bulls ammunition, while a labor market print that complicates monetary policy and severe sector divergence give skeptics equal reason for caution. The broad indices may well close near current levels — but the composition of those gains matters more than the number itself. A market that finishes up 0.20% on a day when half its sectors are negative and a handful of chip stocks carry the whole load is not the same as a market that earns the same gain broadly. Traders heading into the close should know which version they are dealing with.
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.

