Overview:
U.S. equities are broadly higher at midday Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite up 1.53% to 26,199.75 and the S&P 500 gaining 0.81% to 7,396.47, driven by a 3.5% surge in semiconductor shares. April payrolls came in at 115,000 — nearly double the 65,000 consensus — while U.S. forces fired on two Iranian oil tankers, keeping geopolitical risk elevated. Standout movers include Rocket Lab up more than 2
Overview:
U.S. equities are broadly higher at midday Friday, with the Nasdaq Composite up 1.53% to 26,199.75 and the S&P 500 gaining 0.81% to 7,396.47, driven by a 3.5% surge in semiconductor shares. April payrolls came in at 115,000 — nearly double the 65,000 consensus — while U.S. forces fired on two Iranian oil tankers, keeping geopolitical risk elevated. Standout movers include Rocket Lab up more than 25%, Fluence Energy surging nearly 40%, and Akamai Technologies jumping 28.5%, while CoreWeave fell over 7% and Trade Desk dropped 13%.
NEW YORK — The Nasdaq is leading the tape at midday, but the session’s two biggest macro events are pointing in completely different directions — and at some point this afternoon, the market will have to pick a lane.
📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this tape: the semiconductor sector is doing the heavy lifting, and it deserves credit — a 3.5% sector-wide surge is not noise. But I’m not comfortable calling this a clean risk-on session when U.S. forces just struck two Iranian oil tankers and the Strait of Hormuz is back in play as an active flashpoint. The jobs number at 115,000 is genuinely strong, and in isolation it would be unambiguously bullish. The problem is that a jobs print that strong reduces the Fed’s urgency on rate cuts, which is a headwind for the rate-sensitive growth names that make up the bulk of the Nasdaq’s weight. The market is threading a needle right now between chip momentum and macro crosscurrents. The level I’m watching into the close: Nasdaq holding 26,000. A slip below that before 3 PM would tell me the geopolitical risk premium is reasserting itself. A hold above 26,200 into the final hour signals that chips have enough institutional conviction to carry the week’s close.
NEW YORK, May 8, 2026 — The Nasdaq Composite is up 1.53% to 26,199.75 at midday Friday, with the S&P 500 gaining 0.81% to 7,396.47. Semiconductor stocks are the primary engine, surging 3.5% as a sector. April nonfarm payrolls came in at 115,000 — nearly double the 65,000 economist consensus — complicating the rate cut narrative while simultaneously confirming that labor market resilience has not broken down. U.S. military forces struck two Iranian oil tankers in the Persian Gulf overnight, ratcheting geopolitical risk back up after Tuesday’s brief ceasefire relief. The session’s standout individual movers — Rocket Lab (RKLB) up more than 25%, Fluence Energy (FLNC) up nearly 40%, and Akamai Technologies (AKAM) up 28.5% — each have distinct catalysts that are worth separating from the index-level story.
Semiconductors Are Carrying the Nasdaq — But the Sector Needs Confirmation
A 3.5% surge in semiconductor stocks on a single Friday session is the kind of move that demands a clear-eyed attribution rather than a celebration. The AI chip trade re-entered the tape with conviction this week following AMD’s blowout Q1 print and Intel’s Apple partnership reports, and Friday’s session looks like a continuation of that institutional momentum rather than a fresh catalyst. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (SOX) is the confirmation gauge here — if it closes at or above midday levels, the move has real follow-through. If it fades from current highs into the 3 PM window, the morning’s surge was more short-covering than accumulation.
The structural case for chips remains intact. Micron’s sold-out HBM capacity through 2026 and AMD’s 57% year-over-year data center revenue growth are not figures that get revised away in a single session. What changes week to week is the risk appetite that determines how aggressively institutional desks are willing to extend semiconductor exposure at current multiples. At the Nasdaq’s midday level of 26,199.75, the index is pricing a forward earnings environment that leaves very little room for a macro deterioration — and two of Friday’s largest macro inputs, the jobs report and the tanker strikes, are pulling in opposite directions on that question.
Mega-cap technology’s role as the market’s ballast is being tested again. Nvidia, AMD, Broadcom, and Qualcomm collectively carry enough index weight in the Nasdaq to sustain a 1.5% gain even when other segments of the market are under pressure. That concentration is both the rally’s strength and its vulnerability: if any of those names reverses on an afternoon headline — and a Persian Gulf flashpoint is exactly the kind of catalyst that moves energy-cost and supply-chain assumptions for hardware manufacturers — the index can give back a meaningful fraction of the morning’s gains in under an hour.
Data Visual
Midday Index Performance — May 8, 2026 (% Change)
Shows how the Nasdaq’s semiconductor-driven surge compares to broader index performance at Friday midday, illustrating the tech-led nature of the session’s gains.
Values in %
Key Stat
+3.5%
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index’s midday gain — the primary engine behind the Nasdaq’s 1.53% advance and the most important sector-level confirmation to watch into Friday’s close.
The Jobs Number That Complicates Everything
April nonfarm payrolls printed at 115,000 — nearly double the 65,000 consensus estimate — and the market’s initial reaction was, somewhat paradoxically, to keep buying. That response requires some unpacking. A jobs number this far above consensus would ordinarily introduce meaningful hawkish repricing into rate futures, since the Fed has explicitly conditioned the pace of rate cuts on labor market deterioration. If the labor market is not deteriorating — and 115,000 payrolls against a 65,000 estimate is a strong statement that it is not — the Fed’s urgency on cuts diminishes materially.
The reason equities are holding despite the beat is a combination of two factors. First, the semiconductor sector’s momentum is largely an AI infrastructure story, and AI capital expenditure cycles have historically been less sensitive to rate path adjustments than consumer or real estate-adjacent equities. Second, the April print may be drawing some skepticism from institutional desks that are treating it as a pre-tariff data artifact — the same front-running dynamic that distorted Q1 import data — rather than a structural statement about underlying labor demand. Whether that skepticism is warranted will become clearer in May’s data, which carries none of the pre-tariff distortion.
The bond market’s reaction is the cleaner read. Ten-year Treasury yields climbed on the payrolls beat, which is the mechanically correct response — strong labor data reduces rate cut probability and pushes yields higher. That move is a direct headwind for the Nasdaq’s growth-heavy composition, which carries more duration sensitivity than the broader S&P 500. The fact that the Nasdaq is up 1.53% despite rising yields is a statement about how much conviction the semiconductor trade currently carries. It is also a data point that should make traders cautious: rallies that run against their own macro headwinds tend to mean-revert faster when the headwind finally catches up. The ISM Services miss earlier this week remains in the background as a counterweight to today’s payrolls strength — two data points that do not yet form a consistent macro narrative.
Analyst Note
Multiple Fed watchers revised their rate cut probability models following the April payrolls print. The June meeting is now broadly expected to hold rates unchanged, with the first cut probability shifting toward September at the earliest, according to CME FedWatch data tracked via CME Group. Several strategists noted that the payrolls beat, combined with Tuesday’s ISM Services New Orders contraction, presents the Fed with conflicting signals on both mandates simultaneously — a setup that historically produces extended policy pauses rather than decisive pivot signals in either direction.
Iranian Tanker Strikes Put the Geopolitical Crossfire Back on the Tape
U.S. military forces struck two Iranian oil tankers in the Persian Gulf overnight, and the market’s midday advance has absorbed that headline with less volatility than the event arguably warrants. The Strait of Hormuz risk was already elevated heading into this session — roughly 20% of global oil supply transits that chokepoint — and a direct U.S. military strike on Iranian shipping escalates the confrontation in a way that Tuesday’s ceasefire language had temporarily masked. West Texas Intermediate crude’s reaction will be the real-time geopolitical gauge: a sustained move back above the $106 threshold that Tuesday’s midday analysis identified as the inflection level would reintroduce the energy cost headwind that dragged on equities for most of last week.
The specific risk for the Nasdaq’s semiconductor names is less about oil prices directly and more about supply chain assumptions. Advanced semiconductor manufacturing relies on chemical precursors and specialty gases with supply chains that run through Persian Gulf trade lanes. A prolonged Hormuz disruption — even a partial one — introduces lead time and input cost variables that are not currently reflected in the consensus earnings models for chip manufacturers. Reuters has reported that the Iranian government formally condemned the strikes and convened emergency consultations, signaling that a counter-response remains under active consideration. That is not a resolved geopolitical situation — it is a pause between escalation steps.
For traders holding semiconductor positions into the weekend, the overnight session in Asia will be the first real pricing opportunity for an escalation response. Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company’s trading behavior in Taipei Sunday night is worth treating as a leading indicator of how institutional desks in the region are positioning around Strait of Hormuz risk — a dynamic that is easy to ignore on a midday Friday tape that feels constructive, and difficult to unwind quickly if it materializes over a weekend when U.S. markets are closed.
The Movers That Are Telling a Separate Story
Akamai Technologies’ 28.5% surge is the session’s most analytically interesting earnings-driven move. The company’s results validated its AI infrastructure pivot in hard revenue terms — a contrast to the multiple AI-adjacent names that have guided optimistically without yet delivering corresponding top-line acceleration. Akamai’s move is worth separating from the broader semiconductor rally because its driver is content delivery and edge computing infrastructure adoption rather than chip supply constraints. The question the stock’s gap-up raises is whether AI infrastructure spending is broadening beyond hyperscaler capex and into the enterprise edge layer — an expansion of the demand curve that would have constructive read-through implications for other infrastructure names.
Fluence Energy’s nearly 40% surge is the session’s most dramatic move in percentage terms and requires the most caution in interpretation. Fluence operates in the energy storage segment, where revenue timing and project-based accounting can produce outsized quarterly swings that do not necessarily signal a change in the company’s fundamental trajectory. A 40% single-session move on earnings in a name with Fluence’s volatility profile is as likely to reflect short-covering and thin liquidity as it is to reflect a genuine re-rating. Traders should wait for the stock to establish a post-earnings range over several sessions before treating the gap as a new baseline.
Rocket Lab’s 25%+ advance follows a contract announcement that extends its launch manifest and adds institutional credibility to its position in the small-launch and satellite servicing segment. The stock has historically been volatile on both sides of major announcements, but a sustained hold above the gap’s opening level into Friday’s close would suggest that the institutional bid is not simply reactive momentum. On the downside, Trade Desk’s 13% decline following guidance that disappointed against elevated expectations is a clean example of the pattern visible across this earnings cycle: companies that beat historical results but miss forward estimates are being punished more severely than the absolute numbers suggest. CoreWeave’s 7%+ decline similarly reflects guidance friction in a market that has priced AI infrastructure names for continuous upside delivery with no room for execution pauses.
Data Visual
Friday Midday Standout Movers — May 8, 2026 (% Change)
Highlights the session’s largest individual stock moves, showing the wide dispersion between earnings-driven surges and guidance-miss declines that defines Friday’s tape.
Values in %
Key Stat
115,000
April nonfarm payrolls — nearly double the 65,000 consensus estimate. The print removes the labor market deterioration rationale for near-term Fed cuts and directly complicates the rate-sensitive growth stock narrative underpinning the Nasdaq’s midday advance.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Nasdaq hold target | 26,000 | Slip below before 3 PM signals geopolitical risk premium reasserting; hold above 26,200 into the final hour confirms chip momentum has institutional backing into the close |
| S&P 500 midday | +0.81% / 7,396.47 | Broader market constructive but not driving — watch for divergence if Nasdaq fades while S&P holds, which would signal sector rotation rather than broad risk-off |
| Semiconductor sector (SOX) | +3.5% | Must close at or above midday levels for the move to register as accumulation rather than short-covering; fade from current highs changes the read |
| April Nonfarm Payrolls | 115,000 vs. 65,000 est. | Reduces June rate cut probability; watch 10-year yield — sustained move above 4.5% would increase pressure on Nasdaq’s duration-sensitive growth names |
| WTI Crude geopolitical gauge | ~$104–106 range | Sustained move above $106 reintroduces the energy cost headwind and challenges Friday’s rally logic; Hormuz escalation overnight = primary weekend tail risk |
| Trade Desk (TTD) | -13% | Guidance-miss punishment consistent with this earnings cycle’s zero-tolerance pattern for forward disappointment; read-through pressure on other high-multiple ad-tech names |
The Nasdaq’s 1.53% midday advance is built on chips — but it is operating in a crossfire. The semiconductor sector’s 3.5% surge reflects genuine AI infrastructure conviction that has earned its momentum through three consecutive weeks of hard earnings validation. What it has not earned is immunity from a jobs print that reduces the Fed’s urgency on rate cuts, or from a Persian Gulf escalation that puts overnight risk squarely on the table heading into a weekend when U.S. markets are closed. The session’s answer to the title question is: both, simultaneously, with the chips currently winning. Whether that holds through the close depends on two things neither the Fed nor the semiconductor companies control — what the Iranian government decides to do next, and whether the bond market finishes pricing a 115,000 payrolls beat before 4 PM.
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.

