Count Steer wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 9:37 pm
MyLittleStudPony wrote: Fri Jun 05, 2026 9:24 pm
Quite a drop in the US, mainly after the FTSE had closed I think. Be interesting to see where it goes on Monday.
Might just be the start of something. But I think it was just a reaction to some news about jobs. But ...
Really strange - the Google AI appears to respond that the markets haven't fallen when asked 'why have the markets fallen?
Nasdaq down 4%, DOW down 695 points. Could just be folk tidying up before the weekend.

Monday will be interesting.
I have got access to the fancy version (or one of them) of ChatGPT. It says this:
Here's a summary of what happened in U.S. markets today (Friday, June 5, 2026):
Major Indexes
Dow Jones Industrial Average: -695 points (-1.35%)
S&P 500: -2.64%
Nasdaq Composite: -4.18% — its worst day since April 2025.
What drove the sell-off?
1. Strong jobs report spooked investors
The U.S. added 172,000 jobs in May, far above expectations of around 80,000, while unemployment held at 4.3%. Normally strong employment is good news, but markets interpreted it as reducing the likelihood of Federal Reserve rate cuts later this year. Higher-for-longer interest rates tend to hurt growth and technology stocks.
2. Massive semiconductor and AI-stock selloff
The biggest damage came from AI and chip stocks after disappointing news from the semiconductor sector. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index fell about 8.5%, and more than $1 trillion of market value was wiped out from chipmakers in a single day.
Major losers included:
Nvidia
Advanced Micro Devices
Broadcom
Intel
Many fell between roughly 6% and 13%.
3. Bond yields jumped
Investors sold Treasuries after the jobs report, pushing yields higher. Rising yields make future earnings less valuable in today's terms, which especially pressures high-growth technology stocks.
Bigger picture
The S&P 500 snapped a long winning streak and recorded its worst daily decline since 2025.
Despite today's drop, major indexes remain positive for the year.
The market narrative has shifted from "Fed cuts coming" toward "rates may stay elevated longer," which is weighing on the AI-driven rally that dominated much of 2026.
Key takeaway
Today's move was essentially a double hit:
A stronger-than-expected economy reduced hopes for rate cuts.
AI and semiconductor stocks suffered a sharp repricing after weak sector news.
That combination led to a broad risk-off day, with tech stocks bearing the brunt of the selling.
If you'd like, I can also break down which sectors won and lost, or explain what today's action means for investors over the next few weeks.