Today: 8 June 2026
Dow Jones gains with chip stocks ahead of inflation data

Dow Jones gains with chip stocks ahead of inflation data

New York, June 8, 2026, 11:03 (EDT)

  • The Dow hovered around 51,110, up roughly 0.5%. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted bigger gains, with chip stocks rebounding.
  • Traders picked up shares after Friday’s selling, with the strong jobs report last week reviving concerns about Fed rates.
  • May CPI inflation data lands Wednesday. Oil prices and Treasury yields remain risks.

Dow Jones bounces back above 51,000 as chip stocks rebound The Dow Jones Industrial Average traded up 244 points, or 0.48%, to 51,110.80 in early Monday trading. The move comes after a sharp fall Friday, with chip makers lifting the index. The S&P 500 advanced 1.09% and the Nasdaq Composite gained 1.72%.

Bounce matters as traders weigh if Friday’s drop was just a quick reset or signals a tougher pullback after the AI rally. Nasdaq, with heavier tech weighting than the Dow, led the rebound. The Dow’s smaller move stayed closer to its usual industrials, banks, healthcare, and consumer stocks.

U.S. stocks traded during normal hours in New York. The NYSE runs Monday through Friday, 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. EDT. Juneteenth on June 19 is the exchange’s next listed 2026 holiday.

Dow Jones climbed 146.11 points, or 0.29%, to 51,015.91 soon after the open, Reuters said. The S&P 500 added 0.68% and the Nasdaq gained 1.09%. Chips led, with the Philadelphia semiconductor index up 4.6% on strength from Intel, Micron, and Nvidia. “Sometimes these moves get too far too fast and you need a bit of a pullback,” said Art Hogan, chief market strategist at B Riley Wealth. Reuters

Dow Jones is a price-weighted index tracking 30 U.S. blue chips, so stocks with bigger share prices move it more than cheaper stocks. The S&P 500 does it differently, ranking companies by market cap. When tech rallies, moves tend to pop more in the Nasdaq and S&P 500 than the Dow.

Hotter jobs data set off Friday’s selloff. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported U.S. nonfarm payrolls increased by 172,000 in May, with the unemployment rate steady at 4.3%. That mix dented bets on Fed rate cuts.

“We’re talking about a strong economy,” said Gary Schlossberg, market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, after Friday’s data. He said economic strength piled on top of inflation risk from the Gulf, making possible Fed rate cuts tougher to consider. Reuters

Bonds kept pressure on stocks. The two-year Treasury yield, closely tied to Fed policy expectations, slipped to 4.145%. The 10-year yield ticked up to 4.54%. A basis point equals one-hundredth of a percentage point. According to Reuters, Fed funds futures signaled traders see a 68% chance for a rate hike by December.

Stocks pushed higher, but the move looked shaky. Traders kept an eye on CPI numbers, with “core” CPI removing food and energy. Any sign of hotter inflation or another oil spike could put rate-hike talk back at the center of trading. “We do have this obvious push from energy inflation,” said Thomas Simons, chief U.S. economist at Jefferies.

Goldman Sachs pushed back its rate cut forecast, now telling clients the Fed will hold rates steady until 2027 and skip cuts through 2026. The call follows stronger economic and jobs figures in the payrolls report. The bank said the latest data “lower the bar for a rate hike” but it does not expect a hike to happen. Reuters

Citi took a more bullish stance, bumping its 2026 S&P 500 year-end target up to 8,100 from 7,700 and pointed to solid earnings and gains related to AI. “We have high confidence in continued earnings beats through year-end,” the bank said. But Citi also noted that whether AI-led growth sticks past 2027 “remains a key question.” Reuters

Dow, other indexes rebound as BMO’s Schleif sees ‘healthy reset’

Carol Schleif, chief market strategist at BMO Wealth Management, stayed in the reset camp, saying Friday’s pullback was “a healthy reset for stocks” and not a sign of bigger trouble. That was enough for now to bring buyers back into the Dow and other indexes. marketwatch.com

Stock Market Today

  • Netflix Shares Rise as Founder Reed Hastings Exits Board, Jay Hoag Takes Chair
    June 8, 2026, 11:29 AM EDT. Netflix Inc. (NFLX) shares rose about 1% on Friday, defying a broader market pullback, following co-founder Reed Hastings' formal exit from the board. Hastings, who co-founded Netflix in 1997 and served as CEO for over 25 years, stepped down as executive chairman, with longtime independent director Jay Hoag appointed as new Chairman. Hastings' departure marks the end of nearly three decades leading Netflix's transformation from a DVD rental service to a streaming giant. Retail investor sentiment on NFLX shifted from bearish to extremely bullish, with 74% of analysts rating the stock as Buy or Hold and an average 12-month price target of $114.56, implying a 39% upside from current levels.

Latest articles

Dow Jones gains with chip stocks ahead of inflation data

Dow Jones gains with chip stocks ahead of inflation data

8 June 2026
Chip stocks surged, powering the Nasdaq up 1.72% and the S&P 500 1.09% higher, while the Dow rose 0.48% to 51,110 as investors bought back Friday’s losses after a strong jobs report fueled Fed-rate worries; May CPI inflation data Wednesday and oil prices remain key risks for market direction.
Growth ETFs Draw Attention Again as Investors Eye Big Tech Weighting

Growth ETFs Draw Attention Again as Investors Eye Big Tech Weighting

8 June 2026
Invesco QQQ Trust surged 2.2% and Vanguard growth ETFs gained over 1% as tech stocks rebounded, spotlighting growth ETFs’ outperformance—VUG returned 15.42% annually over five years, beating VOO—amid record $7.43 billion U.S. equity fund inflows driven by AI-led rallies, but concentrated tech bets mean higher volatility if sentiment shifts, especially with inflation and Fed risks looming.
Alphabet’s $80 billion AI stock sale puts Google’s rally to the test

Alphabet AI Search Drives Wall Street Target Hikes, Cloud Margins Still Draw Scrutiny

8 June 2026
Alphabet has ordered over 3 million TPUs from Intel for 2028 as it ramps up AI infrastructure, prompting Piper Sandler to raise its price target to $445 on rapid AI-assisted search growth, while UBS warns faster Google Cloud TPU revenue could pressure margins; Alphabet shares recently traded at $362.21, down $6.32, after boosting its equity offering to $84.75 billion to finance the AI buildout.
$95 Billion Dividend ETF May Not Be As Safe As It Looks

$95 Billion Dividend ETF May Not Be As Safe As It Looks

8 June 2026
SCHD’s top 10 holdings now make up about 43.5% of assets, raising concentration risk just as investors pile in for safety after a tech-led selloff; with $95.17 billion in assets, a 3.24% yield, and a 0.06% expense ratio, SCHD traded up 0.4% to $32.44 Monday, but its performance and risk profile now hinge more than ever on a handful of big stocks.
Wall Street’s Chip Rebound Lifts Nasdaq — Inflation Test Comes Next

Wall Street’s Chip Rebound Lifts Nasdaq — Inflation Test Comes Next

8 June 2026
Intel soared 8.5% to lead a 4.6% surge in chip stocks after reports Alphabet tapped it to make 3 million in-house chips and Nvidia was evaluating its technology, powering a 1.43% Nasdaq jump as investors returned to AI trades ahead of Wednesday’s key inflation data; Citigroup raised its S&P 500 target to 8,100, but Goldman Sachs warned the Fed may keep rates unchanged through 2026.
Growth ETFs Draw Attention Again as Investors Eye Big Tech Weighting
Previous Story

Growth ETFs Draw Attention Again as Investors Eye Big Tech Weighting

Go toTop