Level 1 - Absolute Beginner
On Thursday, June 5, US stock markets fell sharply. This means that many companies lost a lot of value in one day. It was one of the worst days for stocks in many months.
The technology companies fell the most. Companies like Nvidia, Broadcom and Micron, which make computer chips, lost a lot of money. Computer chips help power artificial intelligence, which is a type of smart computer technology.
A jobs report showed that many people in the US found new work in May. This sounds like good news. But it made investors worried that interest rates might go up, not down.
When interest rates are high, it costs more to borrow money. This makes stocks less attractive to investors. So when the report came out, many people sold their shares and stock prices fell.
- stock market
- a place where people buy and sell shares, which are small pieces of ownership in companies
- share
- a small portion of ownership in a company that can be bought and sold on the stock market
- interest rate
- the percentage that must be paid to borrow money, set by central banks like the Federal Reserve
- computer chip
- a tiny electronic device that processes information and powers modern computers, phones and AI systems
- investor
- a person or organisation that puts money into companies or assets hoping to make a profit
- artificial intelligence
- computer systems designed to perform tasks that normally require human thinking, such as recognising images or understanding language
- jobs report
- an official government document that shows how many people found or lost work in a given month
- sell-off
- a rapid fall in prices caused by many investors selling their shares at the same time
Level 2 - Elementary
US stock markets suffered their worst session since last October on Thursday, June 5. The Nasdaq fell 4.2 percent while the S&P 500 dropped 2.6 percent, erasing roughly one trillion dollars of market value in a single day. The sell-off was led by semiconductor and artificial intelligence companies, which had been among the biggest winners in 2026.
The trigger for the sell-off was the May jobs report, published by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. It showed that employers added 172,000 new jobs in May and that the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3 percent. While this sounds like good news for workers, it surprised investors who had been expecting weaker results.
Stronger employment figures make it less likely that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates. In fact, some analysts now believe the Fed may need to raise rates to keep inflation under control. Rising interest rates are bad for technology stocks because they make it more expensive for companies to borrow money for growth.
The biggest losses came from chipmakers. Nvidia - the most valuable company in the S&P 500 - fell 6.2 percent. Broadcom dropped 7.9 percent and Micron Technology slid 13.3 percent. Analysts warned that AI-related stocks may have become too expensive compared to the actual earnings that companies produce.
- semiconductor
- a material used to make computer chips that can conduct electricity under certain conditions
- Federal Reserve
- the central bank of the United States, which sets interest rates and controls the money supply
- Bureau of Labor Statistics
- the US government agency that collects and publishes data about employment, wages and prices
- inflation
- the general rise in the prices of goods and services over time, reducing the purchasing power of money
- earnings
- the profits that a company makes after paying all its costs
- market capitalisation
- the total value of all a company's shares, calculated by multiplying the share price by the number of shares
- chipmaker
- a company that designs or manufactures semiconductor chips used in computers and electronic devices
- interest rate cut
- a reduction in the rate set by a central bank, which makes borrowing cheaper and often boosts stocks
Level 3 - Intermediate
US equity markets suffered their most severe single-session decline since October on Thursday, June 5, with the Nasdaq composite shedding 4.2 percent and the S&P 500 losing 2.6 percent as a broader rotation out of high-multiple technology and AI-related names accelerated through the afternoon. The trigger was a May non-farm payrolls report that badly wrong-footed markets: employers added 172,000 jobs against a consensus forecast of around 130,000, and the unemployment rate held steady at 4.3 percent.
The jobs data immediately repriced Federal Reserve expectations. Prior to the report, futures markets were pricing in a roughly 45 percent probability of a September rate cut. Within two hours of the release, that probability had collapsed to below 20 percent, and a small but growing cohort of traders began pricing in the possibility of a rate hike before year-end. The sharp rise in Treasury yields that followed placed further pressure on growth and technology stocks, whose valuations are particularly sensitive to the discount rate applied to their future earnings.
Semiconductor companies bore the brunt of the sell-off. Nvidia - which had risen more than 80 percent since January on relentless demand for its H200 AI accelerators - closed down 6.2 percent. Broadcom fell 7.9 percent after analysts at several brokerages cut price targets. Micron Technology led the sector lower with a 13.3 percent decline, its worst single-day move in nearly three years, after a Morgan Stanley note warned that AI-related memory demand growth was priced to perfection and left no margin for error.
The episode rekindled a debate that has persisted throughout 2026 about whether the AI-driven rally in semiconductor stocks is justified by near-term fundamentals. Bulls argue that hyperscaler capital expenditure on data-centre infrastructure will remain above 400 billion dollars this year, sustaining demand for chips. Bears counter that price-to-earnings multiples for leading semiconductor names are near 40 times forward earnings - levels historically associated with subsequent corrections of 20 to 30 percent - and that any evidence of slowing enterprise software adoption or consumer hesitation over AI subscription services could trigger a further unwind.
- non-farm payrolls
- a monthly US government report measuring the number of new jobs added across most sectors of the economy, excluding farm workers and some self-employed individuals
- consensus forecast
- the average prediction made by a group of economists or analysts, representing mainstream market expectations
- futures market
- a financial market where contracts are traded that lock in the price of an asset to be bought or sold at a future date
- discount rate
- the interest rate used to calculate the present value of future cash flows; a higher rate reduces the value of distant earnings
- price-to-earnings multiple
Level 4 - Advanced
US equity markets registered their sharpest single-session contraction since October on Thursday, June 5, as a materially stronger-than-anticipated non-farm payrolls print catalysed a sudden repricing of Federal Reserve rate-path expectations and triggered a cascading rotation out of high-duration technology and AI-adjacent equities. The S&P 500 contracted 2.6 percent to 7,383, its steepest intraday range since the January tariff shock, while the Nasdaq composite fell 4.2 percent as semiconductor names - which had acted as the primary engine of the index's 28 percent first-half advance - bore a disproportionate share of the forced liquidation.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the economy added 172,000 non-farm payrolls in May, fully 42,000 above the Bloomberg consensus of 130,000, while the unemployment rate held at 4.3 percent and average hourly earnings rose 0.4 percent month-over-month, above the 0.3 percent forecast. Within minutes of the 08:30 ET release, the two-year Treasury yield spiked 14 basis points to 4.71 percent - its highest since March - as the probability of a September FOMC rate cut priced through the secured overnight financing rate options market collapsed from 45 percent to 18 percent. A minority of contracts began assigning non-trivial probability to a 25-basis-point hike by year-end, a scenario that would represent a dramatic policy reversal for Chair Kevin Warsh, who took office in May pledging to assess the data before acting.
Semiconductor and AI infrastructure names bore the brunt of the adjustment. Nvidia, whose H200 GPU cluster orders have driven a year-to-date market capitalisation gain approaching 1.2 trillion dollars, closed at a 6.2 percent deficit, reducing its trailing 12-month price-to-earnings multiple from 43 times to roughly 40 times. Broadcom declined 7.9 percent amid multiple analyst target reductions, and Micron Technology led the peer group lower at 13.3 percent - its worst single session since a memory-cycle downturn in late 2023 - after a Morgan Stanley research note circulated arguing that HBM3E supply will reach equilibrium with hyperscaler demand by late Q3 2026, compressing the near-term pricing premium that underpins Micron's current margin structure.
The episode crystallised a valuation tension that has been building throughout the first half of 2026. Bull-side analysts at Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan maintain that hyperscaler aggregate capital expenditure - projected at 470 to 510 billion dollars for calendar 2026, a 38 percent year-over-year increase - is sufficient to sustain ASIC and GPU volume through at least the first half of 2027. The bear case, articulated most systematically by Bernstein's Stacy Rasgon, contends that the current 38 to 42 times forward price-to-earnings range for leading semiconductor equities is pricing a scenario in which AI adoption curves mirror the early internet - a comparison that implies an equally severe multiple compression should enterprise software conversion rates or consumer AI subscription retention data disappoint even marginally. The June 5 session offered a first, uncomfortable preview of that scenario.