By Mike Dolan
June 8 (Reuters) –
What matters in U.S. and global markets today
By Mike Dolan, Editor-at-Large, Finance and Markets
Wall Street is holding its breath after Fridayโs withering chip sector selloff, as tech stocks around the world fell back sharply in response on Monday.
Red-hot โchip stocks have been knocked back by a combination of last week’s earnings disappointment from Broadcom, a loss of momentum as the S&P โ500โs nine-week winning streak came to an end, and rising Fed rate-hike bets after Fridayโs robust May payrolls report.
Iโll get into that and more below.
But first, listen to the latest episode โof the Morning Bid daily podcast. Subscribe to hear Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news in markets and finance seven days a week.
CHIP CHILL, JOBS HEAT AND WAR
The SOX semiconductor index plunged 10% on Friday alone, with Broadcom itself down 20% over two days and the broader Nasdaq off some 4% heading into the weekend. Futures tried to grab a toehold first thing on Monday, but tech-heavy Asia bourses nosedived and Europeโs STOXX 600 slid to a two-week low.
Adding to โthe angst, Iran and Israel traded direct missile strikes โ over the weekend for the first time since April, catapulting crude oil prices back up over 4% and aggravating rate-hike expectations. Markets now see an almost 80% chance of a hike by year-end and almost two hikes within 12 โ months. Treasury yields are back on the rise.
All this had President Trump fighting multiple fires over the weekend, urging against interest rate rises and renewing calls for cuts instead. At the same time, his call on Israel not to retaliate against Iranian strikes on Sunday went unheeded. The fresh fighting dampens hopes of a comprehensive peace โdeal โthat would free up oil supplies.
With equity markets resetting as they take in all โthe new information, theyโre also bracing for the mega SpaceX โIPO, which is expected on Friday.
While analysts reckon the wave of IPOs expected this summer can likely be offset by a record pace of buybacks, there is concern about a parallel wave of equity financing by the so-called hyperscalers amid the gigantic AI investment buildout. Alphabet announced some $80 billion of new equity sales last week and there are reports Meta is set to follow suit.
Meantime, in Europe, markets are bracing for a long-awaited European Central Bank rate rise on Thursday. Despite this, the dollar has strengthened against the euro on the changing Fed horizon.
Chart of the day
The U.S. economy posted a third โstraight month of strong job gains in May, with payrolls increasing by 172,000, more than โtwice what was forecast. The economy also added 93,000 more jobs in March and April โthan previously estimated, and the unemployment rate held at 4.3% for โa third month. Employment gains averaged 188,000 jobs per month over the past three months, nearly triple the comparable figure โfor the same period in 2025.