Overview:

The S&P 500 closed at 7,405.73 on Monday, recovering modestly after Friday's selloff as semiconductor stocks drove the session's gains. Intel climbed 10% to $109.03 on an Alphabet manufacturing order, Marvell Technology surged 9% on its S&P 500 addition, and Cerebras Systems jumped more than 17% after nine Wall Street firms launched bullish coverage. Iran's statement that it had ended its military operation in Israel provided geopolitical relief, though oil prices stayed elevated and the Dow's s

NEW YORK — Semiconductor stocks did the heavy lifting on Monday, pulling the Nasdaq back from the edge after last week’s sharp selloff, even as the Dow’s slight decline revealed how unevenly the recovery was distributed across the tape.

📊 Trader’s Take
My read on this session: the move is real but narrow. When a 5% surge in the semiconductor ETF is doing most of the work, you don’t have a broad risk-on tape — you have a tech reprieve. The Dow finishing in the red while the Nasdaq gained nearly a full percent tells that story plainly. I’m watching whether semis can hold these levels into Wednesday’s CPI print. If inflation surprises to the upside, the rate-sensitive growth trade that just recovered gets hit again, and the AI trade’s vulnerability to hot inflation data becomes the dominant headline fast. Watch $7,450 on the S&P 500 — that’s the near-term ceiling. The contrarian question worth asking: if Iran’s de-escalation is the catalyst, why did oil prices rise? Markets aren’t fully convinced the ceasefire holds.

The S&P 500 closed at 7,405.73, up 0.30%. The Nasdaq Composite gained 0.86% to 25,929.66. The Russell 2000 added 0.85%, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.16% to 50,786.01, down 80.77 points — the lone index to close in the red on a day the rest of Wall Street was celebrating a geopolitical exhale.

Key Stat
+61%
The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index’s quarterly gain versus the S&P 500’s 13% advance — the gap defining where institutional money is actually flowing this year.
Data Visual
Monday Session Performance: Key Index and Sector Moves (June 8, 2026)
Shows how each major index and the semiconductor ETF closed on Monday, illustrating the tech-led divergence from the broader tape.
Monday Session Performance: Key Index and Sector Moves (June 8, 2026)
Values in %

What Actually Drove the Tape From Open to Close

Two forces converged at Monday’s open to shift sentiment from defensive to cautiously constructive. First, Iran stated it had ended its military operation against Israel following weekend strikes, and President Trump signaled progress on a broader deal. That removed the immediate tail risk of further escalation, though oil’s continued rise suggests traders aren’t ready to price in a durable peace. Second, and more directly actionable for equity desks, Intel surged 10% to $109.03 after reports surfaced that Alphabet placed an order for more than three million tensor processing units to be manufactured in 2028 — a vote of confidence in Intel’s foundry ambitions that the market had largely written off.

The geopolitical relief wasn’t uniform. Energy stocks held their gains given elevated oil prices, and the Dow’s decline reflected the drag from consumer and industrial names that don’t benefit from an AI chip order. Whether the Middle East relief trade has staying power remains the session’s open question, not its answer.

The broader context matters here: last week’s jobs report delivered a 172,000-job surprise that rattled rate-cut expectations and sent tech stocks sharply lower. Monday’s bounce didn’t erase that damage. The S&P 500’s 52-week range runs from 5,943.23 to 7,620.90, and at 7,405.73, the index is still well below its recent high with a year-to-date gain — measured over the past month — of just 0.64%. Friday’s jobs shock continues to shadow the tape, and one day of semiconductor outperformance doesn’t neutralize a repriced Fed outlook.

The Chip Trade, Dissected

Monday belonged to semiconductors, and not in the subtle way that sector rotation usually plays out. The VanEck Semiconductor ETF surged 5%, recovering a meaningful portion of the prior week’s losses in a single session. Three individual catalysts stacked on top of each other to produce that move.

Intel’s 10% gain was the headline. The Alphabet TPU order represents a meaningful strategic shift — Intel’s foundry credibility has been questioned for years, and a hyperscaler placing a multi-million unit order for 2028 delivery is the kind of external validation that changes the conversation. The bear case remains that 2028 is a long runway and execution risk at Intel’s fabs is well-documented. Locking in an order doesn’t guarantee delivery.

Marvell Technology surged 9% to $287.05 after being named as a new S&P 500 constituent, effective June 22. Index inclusion mechanics are straightforward — passive funds must buy — but the timing matters. Marvell’s valuation has been a central debate in the AI infrastructure trade, and forced buying from index rebalancing ahead of June 22 creates a technically supportive window that may not reflect fundamental conviction.

Then there was Cerebras Systems. Shares jumped more than 17% after nine firms — including Barclays, Citi, Morgan Stanley, Needham, Rosenblatt, TD Cowen, UBS, Mizuho, and Wedbush — launched coverage with buy-equivalent ratings simultaneously. Coordinated initiation days like this are rare and tend to front-load bullish sentiment. The practical question is how much of the upside those nine price targets have already been priced in by the end of Monday’s session.

Analyst Note
Baird analyst Jonathan Komp upgraded Crocs (CROX) to outperform and raised his price target to $150, representing nearly 26% upside from Friday’s close. Komp cited higher confidence in sustainable positive inflections and potentially healthier total revenue growth in the second half of 2026 across both the Crocs and Hey Dude brands — a notable call given how compressed consumer discretionary multiples have become amid ongoing demand softness.
Data Visual
Top Single-Stock Movers: Monday Close Percentage Gains (June 8, 2026)
Highlights the individual stocks that drove Monday’s session narrative, anchored by Intel’s Alphabet order catalyst and Cerebras’ analyst initiation wave.
Top Single-Stock Movers: Monday Close Percentage Gains (June 8, 2026)
Values in %

Away from chips, Corning surged 9.31% to $194.16 after Amazon announced a multibillion-dollar agreement to supply optical fiber for its expanding U.S. data center network. Corning’s move is the infrastructure corollary to the chip trade — the physical cable that connects the AI hardware requires specialty materials, and Amazon’s commitment confirms that data center buildout spending isn’t decelerating despite macro headwinds.

Campbell’s Earnings and What Consumer Weakness Is Signaling

Not every story on Monday was a semiconductor win. Campbell’s Company reported fiscal third-quarter adjusted EPS of $0.50, two cents ahead of the $0.48 consensus — a modest beat that did little to obscure the underlying demand picture. Net sales fell 4% year over year to $2.37 billion, with U.S. soup sales dropping 8% and the meals and beverages segment declining 4%.

The beat-on-EPS, miss-on-revenue pattern is the consumer staples story of this cycle. Companies are managing margins through cost discipline while volumes erode. The SEC filing detail shows the pressure is concentrated in core categories — not a one-quarter aberration. For traders positioned in consumer staples as a defensive hedge, that combination of price-driven earnings beats and weakening volumes is worth monitoring carefully. The sector isn’t broken, but it isn’t the safe harbor it once looked like either.

What Tuesday’s Setup Looks Like

Monday’s recovery was real but incomplete. The S&P 500 at 7,405.73 sits roughly 215 points below its 52-week high of 7,620.90. Regaining that level requires sustained semiconductor follow-through, continued geopolitical calm, and — most critically — a CPI print on Wednesday that doesn’t reignite the rate fears that Friday’s jobs number introduced. Inflation data this week could break the Fed’s silence before the June 17 meeting, and any upside surprise resets the entire risk framework that Monday’s session appeared to stabilize.

The Russell 2000’s 0.85% gain — and its remarkable 39.98% twelve-month return — suggests small-cap appetite remains intact. But small-caps are rate-sensitive. A hawkish CPI read would pressure that trade faster than it would the mega-cap tech names that dominate the Nasdaq. Friday’s jobs surprise may have already rewritten the Fed’s summer playbook, and Tuesday’s trading will begin to price that probability more precisely as positioning adjusts ahead of Wednesday’s data.

Level / Event Value Signal
S&P 500 near-term resistance 7,450 Failure here on Tuesday signals the bounce lacks conviction; a close above opens a run toward the 52-week high at 7,620.90
Intel (INTC) post-surge level $109.03 Watch for follow-through above $110 or reversal below $105 — the Alphabet order is 2028 delivery; execution doubt returns quickly
Marvell (MRVL) S&P 500 inclusion date June 22 Passive fund buying front-loads into this date; post-inclusion fade is the historical pattern to watch
Wednesday CPI release June 11 Hottest risk event of the week; any upside surprise breaks the semiconductor reprieve trade and reprices rate-cut odds sharply
VanEck Semiconductor ETF (SMH) +5.0% session If SMH gives back more than half Monday’s gain on Tuesday, the session was short-covering rather than new money — a meaningful distinction

Monday delivered a chapter of recovery, not a conclusion. Semiconductors reclaimed lost ground, geopolitical risk receded from acute to merely elevated, and a handful of single-stock catalysts gave traders specific reasons to buy. The Dow’s decline and Campbell’s revenue miss are the countervailing data points that keep this from reading as a clean all-clear. The tape will tell a cleaner story after Wednesday’s CPI — until then, the bounce deserves respect but not unqualified trust.


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.

James Whitfield is our pre-market analyst at PreMarket Daily, covering U.S. equity futures, overnight movers, earnings releases, and the macro catalysts that set the tone before the 9:30 AM ET open. James...