Stocks Rebound, Led by Chips, as CPI Data Looms

June 8, 2026 Joe Mazzola
With key CPI inflation data later this week, stocks rebounded Monday on a chip rally after Friday's heavy tech selloff. Signs of tension calming in the Middle East also helped.

Published as of: June 8, 2026, 9:17 a.m. ET

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The markets Last price Change % change
S&P 500® Index 7,383.74 -200.57 -2.64%
Dow Jones Industrial Average® 50,866.78 -695.15 -1.35%
Nasdaq Composite® 25,709.43 -1,121.52 -4.18%
10-year Treasury yield 4.53% -0.01 --
U.S. Dollar Index 99.92 +0.14 +0.14%
Cboe Volatility Index® 18.80 -2.71 -12.60%
WTI Crude Oil $91.77 +$1.21 +1.34%
Bitcoin $63,975 +$3,460 +5.72%

(Monday market open) Stocks scrambled higher early today, seeing some "buy the dip" action after the chip sector's 10% plunge made Friday Wall Street's worst day of the year. The weekend didn't exactly calm matters, featuring new flare-ups in the Middle East, while inflation data due later this week could reinforce ideas that expensive crude is spilling into the broader economy.

The S&P 500 Index dropped more than 2.6% Friday to end a nine-week win streak after May jobs growth of 172,000 doubled consensus. Treasury yields spiked on fears the economy might be overheating, raising odds of the Federal Reserve hiking rates to fight inflation. Chances of at least one hike this year were 72% early Monday, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. "Right now, the balance of risks should favor a hike over a cut down the road, but the outlook is very uncertain and therefore we expect an extended pause rather than a near-term hike," said Collin Martin, head of fixed income research and strategy at the Schwab Center for Financial Research (SCFR).

Last week's lackluster guidance from chip giant Broadcom (AVGO) and an equity offering from Alphabet (GOOGL) also contributed to Friday's stomach-churning market retreat, while Iran and Israel's strikes against each other Sunday kept geopolitical tension simmering, though both halted attacks this morning. "The blowout monthly jobs report and spike in bond yields triggered profit taking from traders," said Nathan Peterson, director of derivatives research and strategy at SCFR, in his weekly trader's outlook column. "As traders, we shouldn't be too shocked by this sharp pullback in tech stocks, given the velocity of the rally over the past two months."

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Three things to watch

  1. Sweet turns sour as rate hike worries grow: Three straight months of U.S. jobs growth, steady unemployment, and rising wages all added up to a big red slash in the equity markets Friday. It may be something investors have to grow used to, bringing back a taste of the 2022-2023 era when investors were cautious about enjoying positive data with the Fed hanging over their shoulders. Rate-hike worries will do that to investors, making every economic number a test of whether it might influence the Fed's eagerness to push down inflation. Before the hot jobs report, with its equally hot upward revisions, there was a sense that the Fed was pitched roughly 50-50 in terms of its dual mandate of maximum employment and stable prices. At least for now, the report appeared likely to move the Fed far more toward the stable prices element of its mandate, especially with inflation still well above its 2% target. The Consumer Price Index (CPI) on Wednesday and the Producer Price Index (PPI) Thursday arrive right on time to stir the mix, and anything above expectations could keep investors cautious rather than eager to buy dips. "Inflation is a key driver here," Martin said. "High inflation with a very uncertain outlook should mean investors demand higher yields as compensation."
     
  2. Earnings anxiety helped fuel Friday's selloff: Much of the tech rally the last two months rested on massive first-quarter earnings gains for the chip sector reflecting heavy spending by data center companies building AI infrastructure. Higher borrowing costs associated with possible rate hikes would potentially lead to less spending, especially as many big companies increasingly look to borrowing to fund their AI spending. S&P 500 earnings growth this year is expected to be 22.8%, FactSet said Friday. That includes 44.1% growth in the info tech sector, which includes the major chip stocks. The doubling of the PHLX Semiconductor Index (SOX) index since late March bakes in that sort of sizzling earnings growth. If demand is truly flattening (something far from proven) and rates are rising, investors and analysts would potentially rethink those heavy earnings growth estimates. In such a case, current stock prices would likely be tougher to justify. This helps explain Friday's caution.
     
  3. Winter is here (again). Bitcoin investors found themselves back in a cold, dark winter Friday. The cryptocurrency lost about 6%, broke through its February low around $60,000, and hit the lowest level since October 2024. It's been a breathtaking reversal. Less than a month ago, bitcoin neared its 200-day moving average, spurring talk of a thaw to "crypto winter." As of late Friday, it had lost 26% since May 14. Shortly after that date, a lot of open positions turned red as price moved below $78,000, data provider Glassnode's true market mean, defined as the average cost basis for active investors who purchased coins on the secondary market. No doubt, that fueled additional selling. Over the past week, realized losses on bitcoin positions have averaged $1.2 billion a day, according to Glassnode data. A lot of recent selling was likely caused by a forced deleveraging in futures markets, said Jim Ferraioli, director of digital currencies research and strategy at SCFR. If price makes a sustained move below $60,000, the next support level is probably in the $50,000 to $55,000 range, Ferraioli said.

On the move

  • Chip stocks rebounded early Monday, helping fuel gains in the Nasdaq ahead of the opening bell. The upward surge was led by two stocks—Marvell Technology (MRVL) and Micron (MU)—that took some of the biggest blows Friday. They rose almost 9% and 7%, respectively. Marvell got an additional boost from news it's being added to the S&P 500 Index on June 22.
     
  • Nvidia (NVDA) climbed 2.3% ahead of the open. The chip giant announced a partnership with South Korea's SK Hynix in a collaboration that Nvidia said will support "next-generation memory co-development with Nvidia's AI infrastructure roadmap." The agreement is also designed to improve supply for advanced memory.
     
  • Corning (GLW) spiked 9% early on news of a multi-billion fiber optic agreement to power Amazon AI data centers in the U.S.
     
  • Campbell's (CPB) climbed 1.5% early Monday as earnings slightly beat consensus and revenue met estimates. The company reaffirmed previous guidance, but said organic net sales fell 4%, with meals and beverage net sales and snack net sales falling year over year.
     
  • Flex (FLEX), a Singaporean-American multinational manufacturing firm, leaped 4.6% today on news it's being added to the S&P 500 Index.
     
  • Bitcoin futures rebounded 5% to above $63,000 in the early going Monday, lifting associated stocks like Strategy (MSTR) and Coinbase (COIN). This could suggest some "risk-on" sentiment returning to the broader market.
     
  • The Cboe Volatility Index (VIX), which catapulted more than 20% Friday, eased nearly 13% early today and is back below 19. Anything approaching 20 for VIX suggests heightened uncertainty, but current levels are well above last week's low of under 16. VIX is in contango, meaning futures farther out on the curve are priced above today's spot level, suggesting more uncertain times ahead.
     
  • Apple (AAPL) inched up ahead of its Worldwide Developers Conference starting today. There's growing expectation that the company will unveil a wide number of advances in its AI program, including a revamp of Siri. It's Tim Cook's last worldwide conference as Apple CEO.
     
  • Healthcare and staples stocks—two areas that went against the grain Friday to advance—went the other direction Monday in a sign that the flight to perceived "safety" in defensive sectors may be fading for the moment.
     
  • Technically, now that the 7,500 area—a key pivot point in the S&P 500 Index—has been breached, the 7,330 low from mid-May represents a possible support level. An S&P 500 range that stays between 7,330 and 7,600 can still be read constructively if breadth doesn't deteriorate sharply and dispersion starts to ease. High dispersion means individual stocks are moving more independently of each other and the broader market. The level to watch above now is 7,450, but it might get choppy on the way there.
     
  • In what might be a sign that Friday's selling wasn't panicked, market breadth remained relatively orderly, with 54% of S&P 500 shares trading above their 50-day moving average by late in the session and more than 40% of S&P stocks advancing that day. The session didn't see full-on liquidation, but more of a rotation away from tech and into sectors like healthcare that haven't been as closely correlated with the broader market lately.
     
  • Much of the downward spiral Friday played out in the options market, where call selling and put buying dominated. Upside call buying had precipitated much of the market's move higher, but a lot got unwound Friday and it's something to watch this week to see if it continues.

More insights from Schwab

2026 fixed income mid-year outlook: Income still matters for bond investors in the second half of the year, but investors should be selective. Schwab sees opportunities in investment grade corporate bonds, high-yield bonds, and preferred securities, though each comes with risks, wrote my colleague Martin, in the latest Schwab analysis of the fixed income market.

2026 fixed income mid-year outlook: Income still matters for bond investors in the second half of the year, but investors should be selective. Schwab sees opportunities in investment grade corporate bonds, high-yield bonds, and preferred securities, though each comes with risks, wrote my colleague Martin, in the latest Schwab analysis of the fixed income market.

Providing financial guidance to college grads: Those with a recent college graduate in their circle of family or friends might want to check out Schwab's new Financial Decoder podcast. It breaks down how to help new graduates make smarter financial and investing decisions by focusing on communication, not just content.

Chart of the day

The PHLX Semiconductor Index fell 10% Friday from a high of 13,398 in June. It was at 7,084 in March. It remains above 12,000, well above its 50-day moving average of 10,540. Its RSI dropped to 52 on Friday from above 80 earlier that week.

Data sources: Nasdaq. Chart source: thinkorswim® platform.

Past performance is no guarantee of future results.

For illustrative purposes only.

Friday's 10% plunge for the PHLX Semiconductor Index (SOX—candlesticks) took it only down to levels last seen in late May, emblematic of the sharp rally it's enjoyed. It remains well above its 50-day moving average (blue line), but the premium fell sharply to less dramatic levels. And the Relative Strength Index (RSI—lower chart) also dropped significantly Friday to 52, well below recent highs of 80 and below "oversold" levels of 70 or above.

The week ahead

Mon CPB; Tue SJM, CASY, May existing home sales; Wed CHWY, ORCL, May CPI and core CPI; Thu ADBE, LEN, ECB interest rate decision, May PPI and core PPI; Fri June University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment—preliminary.

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