Overview:
The Dow is up 925 points at midday on June 4, while the Nasdaq is down 0.24% as Broadcom's 15% plunge triggers a rotation from AI-linked chips into healthcare and financials. UnitedHealth rose more than 5% and JPMorgan Chase climbed 4%, driving index-level gains that mask significant underlying stress in the technology sector, which is off 1.46%. Jobless claims came in at 225,000 for the week ending May 30, 13,000 above the prior period and above the 215,000 consensus, while Q1 nonfarm business
NEW YORK — The Dow Jones Industrial Average is up 925 points at midday on June 4, a headline number that flatters what is actually a fractured market: beneath it, the Nasdaq is in the red, technology is the worst-performing sector, and a single earnings disappointment from Broadcom has reshuffled the AI trade in real time.
What Is Actually Driving This Tape
The session’s dominant story is Broadcom. The chip giant reported fiscal second-quarter revenue of $22.19 billion, just short of the $22.27 billion analysts tracked by LSEG had expected — a gap of roughly $80 million that, in isolation, would be unremarkable. What accelerated the selloff was CEO Hock Tan’s silence on raising the company’s full-year $100 billion AI chip revenue target. That omission read as a warning signal to a market that had been pricing in continuous upward revisions to AI infrastructure spending. Broadcom shares fell 15%, pulling the entire semiconductor complex with it and dragging the technology sector to a midday loss of 1.46%.
The money had to go somewhere. It went into healthcare, financials, and communication services — sectors that had underperformed the AI-driven tech run and now look relatively attractive on a valuation basis. That dynamic, not optimism about the economic outlook, explains why the Dow is up nearly 2% while the Nasdaq is negative. Our earlier analysis of whether Broadcom’s AI guidance gap is a warning shot for the whole chip sector is now getting a live market answer — and it is not a comfortable one for AI bulls.
The macro backdrop is adding a quiet layer of pressure. Initial jobless claims for the week ending May 30 came in at 225,000, up 13,000 from the prior period and above the 215,000 Dow Jones consensus estimate. Separately, U.S. employers announced 97,006 job cuts in May — up 16% from April — with technology leading all sectors at 38,242 cuts, the highest monthly total since August 2024. First-quarter nonfarm business sector productivity was also revised sharply lower, to 0.3% from an initial 0.8% read, well below the 0.8% consensus expectation. None of these data points are crisis-level, but collectively they describe a labor market that is softening more quickly than the headline unemployment rate suggests. Our piece on whether jobless claims are signaling a crack in the labor market is worth revisiting with today’s number in hand.
The Healthcare and Financials Surge — Who Is Moving and Why
Healthcare is the session’s standout sector, up 3.16% at midday. Eli Lilly is up more than 5% and NovoCure has surged nearly 12% — moves that are not purely sympathy trades but reflect genuine re-rating as institutional money exits crowded AI positions and seeks quality earnings growth with cleaner valuation support. UnitedHealth, which had been a significant drag on the Dow in prior sessions amid ongoing scrutiny of its business practices, is up more than 5% today, adding roughly 350 points to the index on its own. Morgan Stanley’s move to raise its price target on Humana to $249 per share this morning reinforced the sector’s bid.
Financials are up 2.19%, with JPMorgan Chase climbing 4%, a move that correlates with the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire announcement, which pushed oil prices and yields lower. Lower yields compress bank net interest margin concerns on the liability side while the geopolitical risk premium retreats — a combination that makes large-cap bank stocks briefly attractive. Whether that logic holds into Friday’s session depends entirely on whether the ceasefire holds.
PVH is a notable casualty outside tech. Shares fell 21% after the company beat Wall Street earnings forecasts but lowered its full-year revenue outlook — a reminder that in this market, forward guidance carries more weight than trailing results. Traders who bought PVH into earnings on the beat expectation got the beat and still lost nearly a quarter of their position in a single session. That is not a market that rewards backward-looking analysis.
Sector Rotation at a Glance — Where the Real Divergence Sits
The gap between healthcare (+3.16%) and technology (-1.46%) represents a roughly 460-basis-point spread between the session’s best and worst performing sectors — an unusually wide dispersion for a day when the S&P 500 itself is up only 0.32%. That spread tells you this is not a market moving on macro optimism; it is a market repricing specific narratives.
Communication services (+2.29%) is performing well, suggesting that the selloff is specific to semiconductor and AI hardware names rather than digital economy stocks broadly. Real estate (+1.46%) is benefiting from the yield pullback following the ceasefire news, a trade that unwinds quickly if geopolitical tensions re-escalate. Industrials (+0.84%) and consumer cyclicals (+0.92%) are participating modestly — enough to validate the Dow’s move but not enough to call this a genuine risk-on session.
Utilities (-0.42%) are an interesting underperformer. Utilities typically benefit from yield declines, so their modest slide today may reflect position unwinding rather than fundamental selling — a technical caveat worth monitoring if yields move further.
The State Street SPDR S&P Semiconductor ETF had surged over 170% in the past year according to sector data, making today’s profit-taking in that complex entirely rational from a positioning standpoint. The question — and it is not a simple one — is whether today’s Broadcom-driven exit marks a temporary reset or the beginning of a more sustained derating of AI infrastructure valuations. For that answer, watch the next major AI hardware earnings report with the same scrutiny the market applied to Broadcom’s $80 million revenue shortfall today. Our earlier reporting on whether the chip sector’s 25% single-day surge was built to last identified this fragility weeks ago.
What to Watch Before the Close
The final 90 minutes of trading will test whether today’s rotation has durability or is simply a mechanical flight from Broadcom-related positions. Several specific levels and catalysts deserve attention heading into 4 PM ET.
The S&P 500’s ability to stay above flat is the most important binary. At +0.32%, it is holding, but barely. A tech-led afternoon selloff that pulls the index negative would confirm that Broadcom’s miss is contagious across AI-adjacent names — and would likely set up a defensive open on Friday. Conversely, if healthcare and financials maintain their gains and the S&P closes above 0.5%, that would represent a meaningful broadening of market participation beyond the narrow AI theme that has driven much of 2026’s rally.
Oil and yields deserve a second look after the Israel-Lebanon ceasefire. Both slipped on the ceasefire news, supporting real estate and utilities and reducing one headwind for rate-sensitive equities. But ceasefire agreements in that region have historically fragile track records — any sign of breakdown would reverse today’s yield move and pressure the sectors that benefited from it. The House war powers resolution directing a withdrawal of U.S. military operations against Iran, passed 215-208, adds another geopolitical variable that energy traders in particular should track. See our prior coverage on Iran’s impact on equity momentum for context on how this kind of geopolitical uncertainty has previously translated into market action.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 prior close | ~5,620 est. | A close below this level would confirm the Broadcom miss is spreading beyond semis |
| Broadcom intraday loss | -15% | Any stabilization or narrowing of this loss into close would reduce pressure on tech peers |
| Jobless claims (week May 30) | 225,000 | Above 230,000 next week would shift Fed rate-cut pricing meaningfully earlier |
| Oracle price target (Citi) | $330 | Watch ORCL relative to Broadcom as a proxy for whether AI software can decouple from AI hardware |
| Israel-Lebanon ceasefire status | Active | Any breakdown reverses the yield and oil move that is supporting financials and real estate today |
Afternoon trading sets up as a test of conviction. The Dow’s 925-point surge is real but narrowly constructed, with three or four names doing the heavy lifting. The S&P 500’s modest gain masks a technology sector that is having its worst midday session in weeks. Traders who came into today long healthcare or short semiconductors are sitting on significant intraday gains and will face the decision of whether to take those profits before the close or hold into what could be a volatile Friday. The macro data — softening jobless claims, deteriorating productivity, rising tech sector layoffs — does not obviously support a broad-based equity rally, which makes this afternoon’s tape worth watching with more skepticism than the Dow’s headline number invites.
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.

