Quick Read
-
QQQ bounced 2% Monday after its worst week in over a year, still holding a 15% year-to-date gain.
-
SPY fell 2.5% Friday as a blowout jobs report pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.47%, compressing valuations on AI-heavy tech stocks.
-
Iran-Israel strikes sent WTI crude near $96 a barrel, threatening to reignite inflation and keep yields elevated against the chip-led rebound.
-
Act now: the analyst who called NVIDIA in 2010 just named his top 10 AI stocks — and Invesco QQQ Trust didn’t make the cut. Grab the names FREE today.
Wall Street opened Monday with mixed performance. Chip stocks are rebounding, lifting NASDAQ futures and pulling the index back from Friday’s brutal session. However, the Dow is heading in the opposite direction as crude oil prices jump amid fresh Middle East tensions. CNBC’s Morgan Brennan summed up the setup on air Monday morning, noting the NASDAQ was down more than 4% on Friday, June 5, its worst day in more than a year.
Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) closed Friday with a one-week decline of 4.5%, and is indicated higher in early Monday trading, with the most recent print showing a 1.84% bounce. The year-to-date gain still stands at 14.77%, a reminder that the AI-led rally has plenty of cushion even after the worst single session in over a year.
Chip Stocks Fight Back After Friday’s Bloodbath
Semiconductors, the leading group of the AI trade, are the engine of Monday’s recovery. After Friday’s slide that saw the NASDAQ fall more than 4%, the S&P 500 drop more than 2.5%, and the Dow fall nearly 700 points, buyers are stepping back into the names that took the most damage. The bounce looks like a textbook relief move in the market’s most crowded trade.
Strong Jobs Report Becomes Bad News for Stocks
Brennan attributed the slide to macro forces, saying “the slide coming on the back of the strong monthly jobs report, which boosted yields on treasury bonds and sparked worries higher borrowing costs could hit tech companies investing heavily on artificial intelligence.” The Bureau of Labor Statistics’ May report showed nonfarm payrolls at 159,001 thousand, the highest level in the series and a clear signal of labor market durability.
That strength pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.47% as of June 4, sitting in the 93.5 percentile of its past-year range, according to FRED data. Higher long rates compress the present value of future earnings, and they raise the cost of the enormous capital expenditure programs funding data centers and AI infrastructure. That mechanism is the rate-driven risk hanging over every AI-heavy tech name.