Overview:
Broadcom's opening plunge of 13.71% to $494.78 set the tone for a tech-heavy selloff on June 4, 2026, as investors reacted to the company's unchanged AI revenue guidance despite reporting $10.8 billion in AI revenue for Q2 FY2026 — a figure that more than doubled year-over-year. CrowdStrike fell over 11% after guiding fiscal 2027 revenue to $5.915–$5.959 billion, roughly $50 million short of the Street's $6.008 billion estimate, even as the company posted a 25% EPS beat and record net new ARR of
NEW YORK — Broadcom opened Thursday at $494.78 — down nearly 14% — and the damage spread fast across a semiconductor sector that had been priced for perfection.
A Market Split Down the Middle
The opening tape on June 4 told two different stories at once. The Nasdaq fell 0.76% as Broadcom, CrowdStrike, and a handful of AI-adjacent names weighed on growth indices. The Dow, meanwhile, rose 1.08% — a classic rotation signal, with money briefly seeking shelter in value and industrials after Wednesday’s 532-point drop to 50,776.
The S&P 500 opened down just 0.14%, settling around 7,543 after Wednesday’s close at 7,553.68, which itself represented a 0.74% decline. On the surface, the broad index looks resilient. Beneath it, the sector dispersion is significant — technology is absorbing concentrated selling while defensives catch a modest bid.
This is not a macro-driven tape. No new Federal Reserve commentary, no surprise economic data, no geopolitical escalation moved these markets overnight. The selling is earnings-driven and guidance-driven, which means it’s surgical — and potentially short-lived if buyers decide the reactions are overdone. Whether that view holds through the session is the central question for Thursday. For context on how guidance gaps have previously shaken the rally, see our earlier analysis: Can 3 Earnings Blowouts Drag a Cautious Market Higher?
Broadcom’s Guidance Gap — What the Numbers Actually Say
Let’s be precise about what Broadcom reported and what it didn’t. Fiscal Q2 2026 earnings came in at $2.44 adjusted EPS against a $2.40 estimate. Revenue of $22.19 billion missed the $22.27 billion consensus by a rounding error. AI revenue hit $10.8 billion — more than double the year-ago figure. Net income rose 88% to $9.31 billion. By most definitions, that is a strong quarter.
The problem is the guidance. CEO Hock Tan reiterated the company’s existing AI semiconductor revenue target of “in excess of $100 billion” for fiscal 2027 without raising it. For a stock that had been bid up on the expectation of a positive revision cycle, a non-upgrade lands the same as a cut. Infrastructure software revenue of $7.18 billion, up 9% annually, also missed the $7.32 billion StreetAccount estimate — a secondary wound on a day when investors had little patience.
The guided Q3 AI revenue figure of $16 billion — which would represent roughly a 48% sequential jump from Q2’s $10.8 billion — should, in isolation, look extraordinary. The issue is that the market already knew about Q3’s expected $16 billion figure; what traders were buying heading into earnings was a raise above that level, or a 2027 full-year figure that exceeded $100 billion with more specificity. Neither arrived.
CrowdStrike and PVH — The Secondary Casualties
Broadcom’s decline dominated the headlines, but two other names compounded the morning’s pressure in meaningful ways.
CrowdStrike opened sharply lower after reporting fiscal Q1 2027 results that beat on EPS by 25% — $1.10 actual versus $0.88 expected — and delivered revenue of $1.39 billion, up 26% year-over-year. Record net new ARR of $256 million brought total ARR to $5.51 billion, a 24% annual increase. On pure operational metrics, this was a clean quarter. The problem, again, was guidance. Full-year FY2027 revenue guidance of $5.915–$5.959 billion fell roughly $50 million short of the $6.008 billion consensus, a gap small enough to debate but large enough to trigger stop-losses in a stock carrying premium valuation multiples.
For more on the structural question facing CrowdStrike’s valuation, see: Did One Earnings Miss Just Break CrowdStrike’s 60% Run?
PVH — the parent of Calvin Klein and Tommy Hilfiger — fell 21% after cutting its full-year revenue outlook to approximately flat year-over-year despite beating Q1 earnings by 10.5% with non-GAAP EPS of $2.01. Revenue of $2.03 billion for Q1 rose 2.1% year-on-year, so the business isn’t contracting — but the guidance reset in consumer discretionary carries its own contagion risk, particularly for apparel names already navigating tariff cost pressures.
The consumer angle here matters for the broader tape. PVH’s 21% drop is not a macro signal by itself, but paired with two guidance misses in technology, it adds texture to a market that has been pricing in sustained earnings momentum with little tolerance for any deceleration. For context on how the labor backdrop feeds consumer spending expectations, see: Are Jobless Claims Signaling a Crack in the Labor Market?
The Levels That Will Define Thursday’s Session
Three price levels matter most heading into the first hour and beyond.
On Broadcom, $470 is the structural support traders should watch. That level corresponds to the February consolidation base, and a close below it would suggest the 13.71% opening gap is not simply positioning unwind but a repricing of the AI multiple embedded in the stock. A hold above $470 into the lunch hour would give dip-buyers a credible technical argument. The intraday high of $496.02 recorded in the opening range is the first resistance to reclaim.
On the Nasdaq composite, Wednesday’s close becomes the immediate reference. The index needs to avoid a second consecutive session of accelerating losses. If AVGO stabilizes and CrowdStrike finds footing above its own opening lows, the index has a path back toward flat. If both continue sliding, the Nasdaq faces the risk of breaking below its 20-day moving average — a level that has held as support through the spring rally.
The S&P 500’s 0.14% opening decline is, honestly, the most interesting data point on the board. The index is almost flat despite three high-profile gap-downs. That tells you market breadth is not collapsing — the selling is concentrated. One possible read is that this is healthy rotation. The contrarian case, however, is that the S&P’s resilience is borrowed time: if the tech names keep falling through the day, index-level support erodes.
For additional perspective on whether the AI-driven rally has the breadth to absorb single-name shocks like today’s, see: Is the AI Boom Broad Enough to Carry a 10th Straight Winning Week?
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| AVGO structural support | $470 | Close below signals repricing of AI multiple, not just positioning flush |
| AVGO opening range high | $496.02 | First resistance level; reclaim opens path toward Jefferies $550 target |
| CRWD guidance midpoint | $5.937B | ~$70M below Street consensus; watch if buy-side revises down or defends |
| S&P 500 opening level | ~7,543 | Holding near flat despite tech selloff; breach below 7,500 widens damage |
| Nasdaq open vs. Wednesday close | -0.76% | Contained if AVGO/CRWD stabilize; accelerates if semiconductor contagion spreads to NVDA |
The Consensus Might Be Wrong About One Thing
The obvious read on this morning is that AI spending growth is decelerating and Broadcom’s refusal to raise guidance confirms it. That narrative will dominate financial media through the session. Here’s the problem with it: Broadcom’s Q3 AI revenue guidance of $16 billion, if achieved, represents a 48% sequential increase from Q2. The company’s total AI semiconductor revenue is on track to exceed $40 billion in the second half of fiscal 2026 alone. These are not the numbers of a business where demand is softening.
What Hock Tan may be doing is managing expectations conservatively ahead of a period where customer concentration — Broadcom’s AI revenue is heavily tied to a small number of hyperscaler custom chip programs — makes lumpy quarterly results more likely. A conservative CEO not wanting to overpromise is not the same as an AI demand cycle that has peaked. The market is treating those two things as equivalent this morning, and that conflation may be the actual trading opportunity before Friday’s open.
The chip sector’s ability to absorb single-name shocks without a broader breakdown has been tested before — and traders who have studied those prior episodes closely will know that the initial gap-down is rarely the whole story. For perspective on how prior semiconductor momentum has held or failed under pressure, see: Is the Chip Sector’s 25% Single-Day Surge Built to Last?
Thursday’s session will likely be defined less by the opening moves and more by whether institutional buyers step into Broadcom between $470 and $495 before the close. If they do, the damage is contained and the AI trade resets on firmer footing. If they don’t show up, the sector faces a more difficult week ahead — and the S&P 500’s paper-thin resilience at the open will have been a false signal.
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.

