Friday, June 5, 2026
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June 5, 2026 — 4:00 PM ET close
Broadcom shares plummeted Friday after the chipmaker left full-year AI chip revenue targets unchanged despite strong demand signals, triggering a broader semiconductor selloff. The company's cautious guidance—citing supply constraints and customer inventory normalization—spooked investors betting on accelerating AI infrastructure spending. The move cascaded through the sector, dragging down Nvidia, AMD, and other chip stocks as traders repriced expectations for AI capex growth in the second half of 2026.
Oil prices retreated Friday as diplomatic signals from the Trump administration suggested US-Iran peace negotiations are approaching resolution, with Israel and Lebanon agreeing to a ceasefire framework. WTI crude fell to $92.63/barrel and Brent to $94.71/barrel as traders repriced the geopolitical risk premium that has kept energy elevated since the conflict began in late February. The easing of oil prices is significant for macro markets: it reduces near-term inflation pressures, supports the Fed's hold bias (since energy-driven CPI is moderating), and allows bond yields to stabilize. However, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said no meaningful progress has been made, and Hezbollah rejected the ceasefire proposal, keeping geopolitical risks elevated and oil prices well above pre-conflict levels.
The Russell 2000 rallied 1.45% Friday, significantly outperforming the S&P 500's -0.63% decline, as investors rotated capital out of expensive mega-cap tech names and into smaller-cap value stocks with lower duration risk. The divergence is a classic sign of a growth-to-value rotation: when the risk-free rate stays elevated (10Y at 4.48%) and growth expectations compress (as Broadcom's guidance suggests), investors prefer companies with near-term earnings and lower valuation multiples. The Russell's strength also reflects the fact that small caps are less exposed to the AI capex cycle and more tied to domestic economic resilience—the strong May jobs report supported their valuations.
The 2s/10s Treasury spread compressed 11bps to 40bps Friday following the May jobs report, which showed 172K payroll gains and unchanged unemployment at 4.3%—stronger than expected but not strong enough to shift Fed expectations. The flattening reflects a repricing of growth: the 2-year yield rose 9bps (reflecting hold expectations through June), while the 10-year fell 2bps (reflecting concerns about growth moderating in the second half). A flattening curve at this level (40bps) signals caution: it's not inverted (which would signal recession), but it's compressed enough to suggest investors are pricing in slower growth and limited rate cuts. The curve's shape is consistent with the Broadcom warning and the broader repricing of AI capex expectations.
Broadcom's decision to hold full-year AI chip revenue guidance unchanged—despite reporting strong Q2 results—sent shockwaves through semiconductor stocks Friday, with the company citing supply constraints and customer inventory normalization as headwinds for the second half. The move signals that the AI capex supercycle, which has driven the market's 2026 rally, may be hitting a plateau sooner than investors expected. Broadcom's caution matters because the company is a bellwether for AI infrastructure demand: it supplies critical components to hyperscalers building out data centers for large language models. When Broadcom—which has benefited enormously from the AI boom—pumps the brakes, it suggests customers are taking a breath after aggressive first-half spending. This triggered a cascade: Nvidia fell 3.2%, AMD dropped 4.1%, and the broader semiconductor index (SOX) fell 5.8%, the worst day since March. The repricing reflects a structural shift in market expectations. Investors had been pricing in an uninterrupted AI capex acceleration through 2026 and beyond. Broadcom's guidance suggests that acceleration is moderating, which compresses the long-term growth rate used in DCF models for high-multiple chip stocks. With the 10-year Treasury at 4.48% and the Fed holding rates steady (98.7% probability at June 16-17), the discount rate applied to future earnings isn't falling to offset lower growth expectations—a double hit to valuation. The move also exposes a deeper market dynamic: the Magnificent 7 (which includes Nvidia) now represents one-third of the S&P 500's market cap, and any crack in the AI narrative creates outsized volatility. Today's rally in the Russell 2000 (+1.45%) and weakness in the Mag 7 (-1.02%) shows institutional money rotating into value and away from the most expensive growth names, a sign that the AI-driven concentration trade is beginning to unwind.
💡 DCF (Discounted Cash Flow) — a valuation method that discounts future earnings by a discount rate (WACC, or weighted average cost of capital). When the discount rate rises (because the risk-free rate stays high) or growth expectations fall, the present value of future cash flows drops, pressuring stock prices. WACC incorporates both the cost of debt (tied to Treasury yields) and the cost of equity (tied to risk appetite). When both rise, valuations compress sharply.
Nvidia shares fell 3.2% Friday following Broadcom's warning that AI chip demand is normalizing, raising questions about the sustainability of the AI infrastructure boom that has driven the stock up 20% year-to-date. Broadcom's unchanged full-year guidance—despite strong Q2 results—suggests hyperscalers are taking a breath after aggressive first-half capex, which could pressure Nvidia's growth trajectory in the second half. The repricing is significant because Nvidia's valuation assumes sustained double-digit growth in data center revenue; if that growth moderates, the discount rate applied to future earnings rises, compressing valuations. This is the first major crack in the AI narrative that has dominated 2026 market leadership.
Solana spot ETFs recorded net inflows of $15.6M in a recent week, bucking the trend of outflows in Bitcoin and Ethereum products, as institutional investors rotate capital into the blockchain network's growing ecosystem. Fidelity and Bitwise products led Solana ETF activity, reflecting confidence in the network's technical upgrades—particularly the Alpenglow consensus protocol upgrade targeting mainnet rollout later in 2026. The inflows suggest institutional money is diversifying beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum into alternative layer-1 blockchains with differentiated use cases, particularly Solana's focus on high-frequency decentralized finance and tokenized equities.
The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) greenlit Coinbase Global to offer crypto perpetual futures, making it the first US exchange granted access to the offshore derivatives market. Coinbase will connect American customers directly to Deribit, an offshore crypto options platform the exchange acquired for $2.9B last year. The approval is significant because perpetual futures—leveraged derivatives contracts with no expiration date—have been a major revenue driver for offshore exchanges, and bringing them onshore under US regulatory oversight could accelerate institutional adoption of crypto derivatives while expanding Coinbase's addressable market.
Bitcoin tumbled 3.52% Friday to $61,914.50, on pace for its worst week since February as spot Bitcoin ETFs recorded a record streak of outflows totaling nearly $3B over 10 consecutive sessions. The selling pressure intensified after MicroStrategy disclosed the sale of 32 BTC for $2.5M to fund preferred stock dividend obligations—only the second Bitcoin sale in the company's history and a symbolic break from CEO Michael Saylor's longstanding 'never sell' strategy. The outflows reflect a rotation of speculative capital into AI infrastructure plays and other high-growth trades, as investors reassess risk appetite in a higher-for-longer rate environment.
Solana dominated tokenized equities trading this week, capturing 97% of cumulative spot volume and reaching a milestone of 200,000 on-chain tokenized stock holders. The momentum was fueled by SoFi's launch of SoFiUSD—the first stablecoin issued by a US nationally chartered bank—and Cash App's addition of USDC on Solana. These institutional integrations signal that blockchain-based equity tokenization is moving from niche to mainstream, with Solana's high throughput and low fees making it the preferred settlement layer for fractional stock trading.
Scientists at the University of Chicago published findings this week showing that octopuses possess taste receptors distributed across their eight arms, allowing them to sample food directly without bringing it to their mouth first. The discovery reveals that octopus arms operate with remarkable autonomy: each arm can detect chemical signals and make decisions about whether to grasp or reject prey, effectively giving the creature eight independent 'taste buds' that can work in parallel. This distributed sensory system is so sophisticated that an octopus arm can continue hunting and feeding even when severed from the body—a level of decentralization that challenges how neuroscientists think about nervous systems and decision-making. The finding has implications beyond marine biology: it suggests that intelligence and sensation don't require centralization, a principle that could inform the design of distributed AI systems and robotic swarms.
💡 Chemoreceptors are sensory cells that detect chemical signals (like taste and smell). In octopuses, these receptors are distributed throughout the arms rather than concentrated in a central brain, allowing each arm to process sensory information independently and make decisions about feeding without waiting for signals from the central nervous system.