New York, June 5, 2026, 14:02 EDT
Invesco QQQ Trust traded down 3.29% to $716.26 at 2:00 p.m. EDT Friday. Big tech and growth stocks fell after a stronger U.S. jobs report, with investors pricing in the risk of higher rates.
QQQ is now a go-to ticker for bets on big tech and AI. The ETF tracks the Nasdaq-100 and acts like a stock. Invesco, which runs the fund, calls it one of the most heavily traded ETFs in the U.S.
The report dropped while some were questioning the fund’s long-term outlook. A Motley Fool piece on Yahoo Finance said QQQ returned 627% over the past decade through June 4, ahead of the S&P 500’s 326%. The article pointed to valuation and AI infrastructure spending as bear risks.
Jobs growth came in at 172,000 in May, according to the Labor Department, with unemployment steady at 4.3%. March and April payrolls were also revised up by a total of 93,000. That makes it tougher for investors pressing the case for a quick shift to easier Fed policy on signs of a softening labor market.
Odds for a December rate hike rose to about 70% from 50% on Thursday, according to Reuters. Stephen Brown, chief North America economist at Capital Economics, said in a note that the third consecutive payrolls beat should ease labor-market fears and makes it “even harder” for the Fed to ignore high inflation. Reuters
Fed officials kept their stance. Cleveland Fed President Beth Hammack said the economy was “right around my definition of full employment,” and inflation was “high, moving higher.” Last month, Fed Governor Christopher Waller said he could not rule out further rate hikes if inflation stayed up. Reuters
QQQ is sensitive to moves in yields because growth names in the fund trade on earnings that are projected far out. When yields climb, investors won’t pay as much today for profits that won’t arrive for years. On Friday morning, Investing.com pointed to a rise in the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.54% and a shift out of expensive growth stocks as drivers for QQQ’s early drop.
By early afternoon, QQQ had traded between $713.69 and $731.69, with about 48.6 million shares moving. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF dropped 1.66%. ProShares UltraPro QQQ, which is popular with short-term traders, was off 9.89%.
QQQ’s structure can make selloffs worse. Invesco says sector-focused funds like this tech-heavy one have more volatility than broader funds. The Nasdaq-100 tracks 100 big non-financial names on Nasdaq.
Chart watchers saw less of a cushion after the drop. VT Markets said in a technical note that QQQ’s “Wave 2” pullback had support between $733.60 and $738.20, and kept the view that the bullish trend was intact as long as it stayed above a $695.18 pivot. Wave analysis, which looks for repeated patterns in price moves, was in focus Friday as QQQ finished below that support band but still above the pivot. VT Markets –
Long-term bulls haven’t gone away. Motley Fool’s Neil Patel said QQQ’s main holdings—Nvidia, Apple, Microsoft—are still strong companies. But Patel also flagged high prices and big AI infrastructure bets as risks if that spending ends up wasted.
Competition is in play too. BlackRock filed in April for an iShares Nasdaq-100 ETF to be listed under the ticker IQQ, taking aim at Invesco’s QQQ. Reuters reported QQQ held about $376 billion in assets and remained among the top traded U.S. funds for large-cap growth and tech.
The trade could reverse if inflation comes in cooler next week, or if July payrolls disappoint. That would cut rate-hike bets. But another hot print could hit QQQ’s pricey names and put the $695.18 technical level back in play.
QQQ’s outlook shifted Friday. Investors now aren’t just thinking about where the fund might be a decade from now, but how much rate risk they want to take on ahead of the next inflation report.