US stocks mostly rose on Thursday despite fresh doubts about President Trump’s ability to end the war with Iran and a potential shake-up in the booming AI trade.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose over 1.8%, or 875 points, to notch a fresh record high as investors rotated into healthcare and financial stocks. The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) added 0.5%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was little changed, recovering from steeper losses earlier in the session.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday evening, following the most serious escalation between the US and Iran since the April ceasefire took effect, the House of Representatives voted to end the war in a rebuke to Trump. Earlier in the day, stocks retreated from records, and oil rose as hopes for a quick Iran deal faded.
Elsewhere, SpaceX confirmed in a new filing that it plans to secure a record-breaking $75 billion in its IPO on June 12. Relaxed rules that could fast-track SpaceX’s inclusion in index funds mean that 401(k) investors could wind up invested in the company without buying a single share.
Wall Street digested two additional readings on the labor market on Thursday ahead of Friday’s May jobs report. Weekly jobless claims ticked up to 225,000 for the week ending May 30, while layoff data from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed job cuts also rose.
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The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a record high on Thursday as investors rotated out of semiconductors and into cyclical and defensive sectors such as Financials and Healthcare.
AI leaders Nvidia (NVDA) and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) also helped lift the blue chip index as investors bought the dip.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.3% while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was little changed, recovering from losses earlier in the session.
Broadcom (AVGO) stock fell nearly 12%, trimming steeper losses after the company’s outlook didn’t live up to Wall Street’s high expectations.
Semiconductor stocks, including Intel (INTC), AMD (AMD), Arm Holdings (ARM) trimmed losses on Thursday after the broader chip sector came under pressure following a disappointing outlook from custom AI chip designer Broadcom (AVGO).
High-flying memory and storage names Micron (MU) and SanDisk (SNDK) more than 5% and 3% respecitvely, recovering from a steeper sell-off. Meanwhile shares of Marvell Technology (MRVL), which had opened in the red, flipped into green territory to rise as much as 5%.
A weaker-than-expected AI chip outlook from Broadcom, coupled with the company’s decision to reiterate rather than raise its 2026 guidance, sent shares of the Palo Alto-based company plunging as much as 15% before trimming losses.
The Nasdaq has now recovered from a 0.7% loss at the open to gain 0.2% in afternoon trading. AI leaders Nvidia (NVDA) and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) were carrying the index higher amid some dip-buying.
Despite a sell-off in chip stocks today, Nvidia bounced from a session low at around 10 a.m. ET and continued to pick up momentum throughout the trading session. Nvidia was up 2.7% at last check.
Google stock, which started the day roughly flat, advanced 3.8%.
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Broadcom (AVGO) is not just having a bad post-earnings pullback. The stock is down nearly 15%, erasing roughly $320 billion in market value and putting it among the biggest single-stock wipeouts of the megacap era.
The trigger was Broadcom’s AI outlook. The company beat quarterly earnings expectations, but its AI chip sales forecast disappointed investors after a huge run in the stock, pressuring the broader chip trade.
That’s the hard part about the AI trade right now. The business can still be growing fast, and the stock can still get hit if expectations are even faster.
Market sentiment improved throughout Thursday morning, as the Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) pulled ahead.
The Dow jumped by nearly 2%, or over 900 points, as financials and healthcare stocks took the lead.
A heatmap of Dow components by market cap.
Goldman Sachs (GS), the Dow’s largest component by weight, jumped 4.7% as excitement builds for SpaceX’s initial public offering on June 12. Goldman has taken the lead role in the listing.
UnitedHealth Group (UNH), another top component, climbed 4.8%, as investors rotated out of chip stocks. American Express’s (AXP) 4.4% gain also helped lift the blue-chip index.
Yahoo Finance’s Ines Ferré reports:
Bitcoin’s (BTC-USD) sell-off deepened Thursday, with the cryptocurrency falling more than 6% to around $62,750 before rebounding toward $64,000.
The world’s largest cryptocurrency has been in sell-off mode in recent sessions. Investor sentiment deteriorated earlier this week after digital asset treasury giant Strategy (MSTR) revealed it sold tokens for the first time since 2022.
Although the sale of 32 tokens was just a fraction of Strategy’s bitcoin holding, the move rattled markets, as it was a departure from the company’s aggressive buy-and-hold strategy.
Analysts have been eying $65,000 as a key support level.
“If there were to be a protracted and significant break below here, then that would increase the likelihood that the February low of $60,000 comes into play,” Trade Nation senior market analyst David Morrison said.
Jobless claims picked up during the Memorial Day holiday week, but they continue to be at historically low levels in a sign that the labor market remains largely in stasis.
Applications for unemployment benefits for the week ending May 30 rose by 13,000 claims to 225,000, the Department of Labor reported Thursday, putting US jobless claims at their highest level since February.
Jobless claims rose from a revised reading of 212,000 claims last week and were above economists’ median estimates of 215,000, per Bloomberg data.
Continuing claims for unemployment insurance for the week ending May 23 decreased slightly to 1.77 million.
Job seekers attend a small business summit and job fair hosted by the Chicago Department of Aviation on May 12, 2026, in Chicago, Ill. (Scott Olson/Getty Images) · Scott Olson via Getty Images
Stocks were mixed on Thursday as Broadcom (AVGO) dragged tech stocks lower, putting a dent in the AI trade.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) led the major indexes, rising 1%, or 500 points. The S&P 500 (^GSPC) fell 0.1%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) dropped 0.7%.
The tech sector was the biggest laggard at the open as semiconductor stocks traded lower. Bitcoin (BTC-USD) also continued to decline, falling 4% to around $64,000, as investors took a more risk-off posture.
Oil retreated, with Brent (BZ=F) prices down 2.6% to $95 per barrel and WTI crude prices (CL=F) down 3% to $93 per barrel. Investors continued to look for a breakthrough in US-Iran negotiations but prospects of an immediate deal have faded amid recent escalations in the Middle East.
Broadcom (AVGO) stock fell 15% in premarket trading on Thursday after the company’s outlook didn’t live up to Wall Street’s high expectations.
Although Broadcom’s revenue and earnings technically came in above the Street’s estimates, shares appear to be tumbling after the custom chip designer’s AI sales forecast missed estimates.
Semiconductor revenue from artificial intelligence in the second quarter grew 143% year over year. However, AI chip sales for the third quarter were projected at $16 billion, below analysts’ estimates of $17.2 billion.
Yahoo Finance’s Brian Sozzi reports that Broadcom is on track to wipe out about $300 billion in market cap. If this holds into the Thursday close, it will mark one of the worst routs in market cap for a company in history, per data from the Financial Times.
In the filing, the company said it would offer 555,555,555 shares at $135 each, raising $75 billion. That would amount to 4.2% of the entire float, with the remaining 95.8% held by CEO Elon Musk and other insiders. SpaceX authorized the underwriters to sell additional shares if needed, bringing the total raised to $85.7 billion.
At that share price, it would give SpaceX a hypothetical market cap of around $1.785 trillion.
SpaceX plans to use the proceeds for purposes “including the expansion of our AI compute infrastructure, enhancements to our launch infrastructure and launch vehicles, increases in the scale and capacity of our satellite constellations, and any remaining amounts for general corporate purposes.”
Oil slipped after three days of gains after the US said Israel and Lebanon agreed to a ceasefire, which would remove a key sticking point in talks between Washington and Tehran.
West Texas Intermediate (CL=F) fell toward $95 a barrel, after rising almost 10% in the week’s first three sessions, while Brent (BZ=F) settled near $98 on Wednesday. “The ceasefire is contingent on a complete cessation of Hizbollah fire and the evacuation of all Hizbollah operatives from the South Litani Sector,” the US State Department said.
While the US and Iran have agreed on a rough framework to extend their truce by two months and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, negotiations over the final details are dragging on, even as the two sides stepped up strikes. “No tangible progress has been achieved” in talks with Washington and Tehran is prepared to target objectives inside Israel if its attacks on Beirut continue, the semi-official Tasnim news agency reported the Islamic Republic’s foreign minister as saying.
Oil has erased last week’s drop as a flare-up in clashes evaporated optimism over a deal to extend the current ceasefire, and potentially see flows resume through the strait. As talks drag on, the world’s supply cushion is rapidly running out – with US government data on Wednesday showing crude stocks at Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for WTI, fell for a sixth week to near what is known as a minimum operating level.