Overview:
The Nasdaq is down 2.61% at midday after May payrolls came in at 172,000, nearly double what analysts expected, sending the 10-year yield to 4.54% and triggering a broad technology selloff. Broadcom is down 6% — extending Thursday's 12% collapse — while Marvell Technology and Micron each shed 10%. Bitcoin has dropped 3.52% to approximately $61,914, with traders watching the $60,000 support level closely. The Fed's first FOMC meeting under Chair Kevin Warsh begins Saturday, and today marks the st
NEW YORK — A jobs report that was supposed to reassure markets has instead broken them: with 172,000 positions added in May — nearly double what Wall Street expected — traders are pricing out Federal Reserve rate cuts and selling everything that rode the AI wave higher.
At 1:30 PM ET, the S&P 500 is off 1.60%, the Nasdaq has shed 2.61%, the Russell 2000 is down 2.40%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average is clinging to near-flat territory — the only index where Thursday’s healthcare-fueled 875-point surge is providing any insulation. The divergence is telling. This is not a macro selloff. This is a technology liquidation, and the catalyst is rates.
The Rate Shock Behind the Selling
The May nonfarm payrolls report landed at 172,000 — roughly double the consensus estimate — while the unemployment rate held at 4.3%. On the surface, that combination reads as a healthy labor market. In practice, it obliterated what remained of the market’s rate-cut pricing for 2026.
The 10-year Treasury yield surged to 4.54%, and that single move is doing most of the damage. Higher long-duration yields compress the present value of future earnings — and no sector relies more heavily on long-duration valuation math than technology. The AI-premium stocks that soared on the promise of earnings years into the future are the most exposed. See our earlier analysis: Does a 172,000-Job Surprise Kill the Fed’s Next Cut?
What makes today’s setup more complicated is the Fed calendar. Kevin Warsh’s first FOMC meeting as Fed chair begins Saturday, June 6, with the blackout period now in full effect. There will be no Fed officials stepping to a podium to soothe markets this afternoon. Traders are on their own interpreting what 172,000 jobs means for June policy — and right now, they’re interpreting it as hawkish.
The Semiconductor Collapse That Keeps Deepening
The chip sector was already wounded before this morning’s payrolls print. Broadcom is down 6% at midday — extending a collapse that began Thursday when the stock fell more than 12% following an earnings report that disappointed on AI-segment guidance. Marvell Technology and Micron Technology are each off 10%, while Advanced Micro Devices has lost 9% and Intel is down 8%.
The breadth of these declines matters. This is not a single-company guidance miss cascading through sympathetic names. Every major semiconductor stock is moving in the same direction, at roughly the same magnitude, which suggests systematic selling — likely funds unwinding AI-theme exposure rather than investors reacting to company-specific news. We examined the setup before today’s open: Can Payrolls Rescue a Market Already Rattled by Broadcom? The answer, as of 1:30 PM, is a clear no.
Against that backdrop, Nvidia’s CFO Colette Kress was presenting at the Bank of America Global Technology Conference this morning, arguing that the company’s addressable market could double as next-generation chips come to market. Bank of America maintained its buy rating and $350 price target — representing a 60% premium to Thursday’s close. Whether that message gains any traction today is doubtful, but it underscores how dislocated near-term price action has become from longer-term AI infrastructure thesis. For more on the Marvell angle, see: Can Jensen Huang’s Endorsement Sustain a 40% Surge in Marvell?
Where the Rotation Is Actually Going
The one corner of the market that is not being sold is healthcare, and for good reason. Thursday’s Bank of America upgrade of UnitedHealth to Buy — citing improving cost trends and favorable near-term data for earnings — sent UNH up 5.36% and Humana sharply higher as well. The S&P healthcare sector gained 3% on Thursday. Today, with tech cratering 5%, healthcare is behaving as the sector rotation destination for money coming off the table in semiconductors.
The Dow’s relative resilience — essentially flat at midday versus the Nasdaq’s 2.61% loss — reflects that healthcare weighting. UnitedHealth, Merck (which gained 4.86% Thursday), and Goldman Sachs (up 4.98% Thursday) carry significant Dow weight, and none of those names have the long-duration earnings sensitivity that is punishing chip stocks today.
Consumer discretionary is absorbing its own damage. Lululemon Athletica fell 11% after cutting full-year earnings and revenue guidance. The company cited unspecified headwinds — a vague disclosure that is rarely reassuring. Read our deeper take: Is Lululemon’s Brand Problem Bigger Than a Bad Quarter? The selloff raises the question of whether athleisure demand is normalizing or genuinely deteriorating, a distinction that matters for the broader consumer discretionary read into summer earnings season.
What the Close Will Tell Us
Three things matter in the next 90 minutes. First, whether the Nasdaq can stabilize or continues to slide — a closing print below -3% would suggest forced selling has not yet exhausted itself. Second, Bitcoin: currently down 3.52% near $61,914, with the $60,000 level flagged by technical analysts as the intersection of miner cost-of-production support and the 200-week moving average. A break below that level on a Friday afternoon, with no Fed commentary available until after Warsh’s meeting concludes, could extend crypto weakness into the weekend. Third, the 10-year yield — if it retreats from 4.54% into the close, equity bulls will frame the afternoon as a partial recovery. If it holds or rises, expect the selling to resume.
There is also a case — unfashionable right now — that one strong payrolls print does not reverse a rate cycle. The unemployment rate stayed at 4.3%. Wage growth did not spike. The Fed under Warsh enters its first meeting with a genuinely mixed picture, and the market may be front-running a hawkish turn that never fully materializes. That is the trade worth considering if you have the stomach for it going into the weekend. Related context: Is the Dow’s Record Run Masking a Crack in the AI Story?
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| 10-Year Treasury Yield | 4.54% | Holding here keeps pressure on growth stocks; a retreat below 4.45% could stabilize the Nasdaq into the close |
| Bitcoin support level | $60,000 | 200-week MA and miner cost-of-production floor; a Friday close below this level signals extended weekend risk-off |
| Nasdaq closing level watch | -3.0% threshold | A close worse than -3% signals forced selling not yet exhausted; watch for Monday gap-down risk |
| Broadcom (AVGO) | -6% midday | Extending Thursday’s 12% collapse; stabilization here would reduce systemic chip-sector selling pressure |
| FOMC Meeting Start | Sat. June 6 | Warsh’s first meeting; Fed blackout in effect through June 18 — no official commentary available to calm markets this weekend |
Friday afternoons after a jobs shock are rarely clean. The path of least resistance remains lower for tech into the close, but the size of this drawdown — combined with unemployment holding at 4.3% and no explicit wage acceleration — means the macro case for panic is thinner than the price action suggests. Afternoon trading will reveal whether this is distribution or a shakeout. Watch the 10-year, watch Bitcoin, and watch whether healthcare’s relative strength persists. Those three data points together will tell you more about Monday’s open than any single index level will.
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.

