Overview:
The S&P 500 is down 65.72 points to 7,435.27 at 1:30 PM ET, pulling back from Wednesday's 52-week high of 7,517.12 as the Trump-Xi summit in Beijing failed to deliver concrete agreements. Semiconductor stocks led the decline, with Intel off 6%, Micron down 5%, and Nvidia shedding 3%. The 10-year yield's 9-basis-point jump to 4.55% is the highest level in a year, compressing equity valuations across the growth complex. Jerome Powell exits the Fed chairmanship today as Kevin Warsh assumes the role
NEW YORK — Wall Street is retreating at midday Friday as traders digest a Trump-Xi summit that generated headlines but no agreements, sending the S&P 500 down 65.72 points to 7,435.27 with two and a half hours left in the session.
The Nasdaq Composite fell 337.33 points to 26,297.89, down 1.27% on the session. The Dow Jones Industrial Average shed 380.11 points to 49,681.35, a 0.76% decline. All four major indexes are giving back a meaningful portion of Thursday’s gains, when the S&P 500 closed at 7,501.24 — a level it is now more than 65 points below. For context on just how extended this market had become, the S&P 500’s push above 7,500 was already raising structural questions before today’s catalyst arrived.
The Diplomacy Discount
President Trump departed Beijing Friday without the headline trade deal that equity markets had priced in over the past week. Wall Street had bid stocks aggressively higher into the summit, treating the meeting itself as a de-escalation signal. When the communiqué arrived thin — a Boeing aircraft order and general language about continued dialogue — the buy-the-rumor crowd moved quickly to sell the fact.
The Boeing story captures the dynamic precisely. Trump announced China agreed to purchase 200 Boeing aircraft fitted with GE Aerospace engines, which should theoretically be a win for American manufacturing. Instead, Boeing shares fell 2.8% to $222.70 because the order was smaller than the market had anticipated. That is the clearest possible signal of how aggressively expectations had been front-run.
Stalled U.S.-Iran negotiations added a separate layer of geopolitical friction to the session. Oil reacted accordingly: WTI crude jumped roughly $3 to $104.24 per barrel, while Brent futures climbed 1.49% to $107.30. Rising energy costs feed directly into the inflation narrative that is already driving Treasury yields higher — a feedback loop that makes the Fed’s job materially more complicated on Kevin Warsh’s first day in office.
Today also marks a historic transition at the Federal Reserve. Jerome Powell’s tenure ends Friday, and Kevin Warsh assumes the chairmanship at a moment when the institution faces a genuinely difficult inflation and growth trade-off. The CME FedWatch Tool now shows 45% odds of a rate hike in 2026 — a figure that would have seemed implausible three months ago and that speaks to how quickly the macro picture has shifted. Whether a 6% inflation print defines Warsh’s early tenure is no longer a hypothetical question.
Where the Damage Is Deepest
The semiconductor complex is absorbing the worst of Friday’s selling. Intel dropped 6%, Micron Technology fell 5%, Nvidia shed 3%, and Advanced Micro Devices lost 3%. Cerebras Systems, which staged a remarkable 68% gain in its Nasdaq debut on Thursday, gave back more than 2% in premarket and extended losses into the session. The chipmaker’s market capitalization stands near $95 billion — an enormous valuation for a company trading in its second day as a public entity.
The SOX index’s positioning explains much of the selling. A 143% gain over twelve months had left the index trading 32% above its 50-day moving average — a stretched condition that required either a sustained earnings acceleration or continued multiple expansion to justify. With yields moving against growth valuations and the macro backdrop muddied by geopolitical uncertainty, profit-taking was the rational response. The question is whether this is a one-day flush or the beginning of a more sustained rotation out of the semiconductor trade. The tech rally has shown signs of internal strain for weeks.
Against that backdrop, Cisco Systems stands out as the session’s most significant earnings signal. The networking giant reported third-quarter non-GAAP EPS of $1.06, beating consensus by 1.92%, on revenues of $15.84 billion — a 12% year-over-year gain that topped estimates by 1.71%. The stock jumped 13.4% and is trading as the lone bright spot in an otherwise red technology sector. That divergence matters: Cisco’s results suggest enterprise technology spending remains healthy even as consumer-facing and semiconductor names face pressure.
One Number That Cuts Against the Bearish Case
Before writing off Friday as a straightforward risk-off session, traders should sit with the Empire State Manufacturing Index print. The May reading came in at 19.6, up sharply from 11.0 in April, against a consensus estimate of just 6.2. That is not the kind of number you see in an economy rolling over. Manufacturing is expanding at a pace that surprised virtually every forecaster in the survey, and that data point deserves weight alongside the yield spike and diplomatic disappointment.
The economic picture is genuinely mixed. April retail sales rose 0.5%, slightly below the 0.6% consensus estimate but still representing 4.9% year-over-year growth. Initial jobless claims for the week ended May 9 rose 12,000 to 211,000, modestly above the 206,000 forecast — a slight softening in the labor market but nothing approaching deterioration. Taken together, the data profile argues against the kind of aggressive Fed easing that would justify the equity multiples of six weeks ago, but it equally argues against the recession fears that a 9-basis-point yield spike might otherwise imply. Holding all-time highs with inflation running hot was always going to require a flawless fundamental backdrop, and Friday is a reminder of how quickly that calculus can shift.
The VIX at 17.26, down 3.4% on the session, is an interesting wrinkle. Fear gauges are actually declining even as indexes sell off, which suggests this is orderly profit-taking by institutional investors rather than panicked liquidation. That is a material distinction for anyone trying to read the afternoon setup.
The Levels and Catalysts That Determine the Close
With 150 minutes left in the regular session, the critical question is whether sellers have the conviction to push the S&P 500 through 7,400. A close above that level keeps the broader uptrend structurally intact and frames today as a healthy consolidation from Wednesday’s 52-week high of 7,517.12. A close below 7,400 introduces a more complex technical picture heading into the weekend and Warsh’s first full week at the Fed.
| Level / Event | Value | Signal |
|---|---|---|
| S&P 500 key support | 7,400 | Close below this level signals the May rally has broken — watch for accelerated selling toward 7,350. |
| 10-Year Treasury yield | 4.55% | Highest in 12 months; any move above 4.60% this afternoon would likely accelerate equity selling into the close. |
| WTI Crude Oil | $104.24 | A sustained close above $105 would intensify inflation concerns and add pressure on the new Fed chair entering next week. |
| VIX (Fear Gauge) | 17.26 | Declining VIX on a down tape signals orderly profit-taking, not panic — bullish for a potential late-session stabilization. |
| Cisco Systems (CSCO) | +13.4% | Whether CSCO holds its gains into the close is a bellwether for enterprise tech demand conviction — fading would be a warning sign. |
After-hours catalysts are thin tonight, which means the weekend news cycle — any follow-up from Beijing, any Warsh commentary, any Iran development — will set the tone for Sunday futures. Traders carrying long positions into the close should be aware that Friday’s thin late-session liquidity can amplify moves in either direction. The afternoon setup is tactically neutral to slightly cautious: the VIX’s calm is reassuring, but a 10-year yield at 4.55% on a Friday afternoon, with a new Fed chair and unresolved geopolitical variables, is not the environment where buyers typically rush back in during the final hour. Whether Cisco’s gap-up proves to be the real signal in today’s session — rather than the semiconductor selloff — may only become clear over the next several sessions as the broader earnings picture fills in.
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.

