Today: 3 July 2026
Dow up but AI-chip slide hits Nasdaq after jobs report

US stock futures set for gains ahead of July 4; chip selloff masks broader move

NEW YORK, July 3, 2026, 06:01 (EDT)

  • U.S. cash equity markets are closed Friday for Independence Day observed. Both the NYSE and Nasdaq mark July 3 as a holiday.
  • S&P 500 futures rose 0.3%, with Nasdaq futures higher by 1.0%. This comes even after chips pulled the Nasdaq lower on Thursday.
  • The Dow ended at a new high, but market breadth stood out: over two-thirds of S&P 500 names gained, even as the headline index showed little change.
  • Next week, the U.S. calendar is light and leans rate-sensitive. ISM services hits Monday, with Fed minutes on Wednesday.

U.S. stock investors go into the long weekend without the usual premarket session, as exchanges stay closed for Independence Day observed. The last read on futures had buyers stepping in after a weaker jobs report eased worries about a Fed rate hike soon. U.S. stock and bond markets are shut Friday and regular trading starts back up Monday, July 6.

The Dow finished at a record, but the bigger story was the split between index price and market breadth. On Thursday, the S&P 500 closed little changed, but over two-thirds of its stocks traded higher. The Nasdaq slipped as traders reduced chip bets. That leaves Monday looking less like a typical risk-on move and more like a check on whether buyers stick with old-economy and defensive names while AI shares feel pressure.

IndexThursday closeDay changeWeek change2026 change
S&P 5007,483.24flatup 1.8%up 9.3%
Dow Jones Industrial Average52,900.07up 1.1%up 2.0%up 10.1%
Nasdaq Composite25,832.67fell 0.8%up 2.1%up 11.1%
Russell 20002,996.11down 0.5%down 0.5%up 20.7%

Big losses in chips on Thursday kept a lid on gains elsewhere. The Philadelphia semiconductor index dropped 5.4%, its second steep fall in as many days. Nvidia shed 1.4%. SanDisk tumbled 14.1%. Bruce Zaro, managing director at Granite Wealth Management, said traders might be cashing in after a strong stretch. Reuters said the semiconductor index was still up about 78% on the year.

Apple moved higher, up 4.8%, after Nikkei Asia said the company has plans for five new iPhone models. That gave a boost to the Dow, while chips didn’t help the Nasdaq. Tesla lost 7.5% even with Q2 deliveries beating forecasts. Bending Spoons slid 11.3%, following a 40% jump after its Nasdaq debut.

Jobs numbers gave futures a boost but didn’t clear the path. Nonfarm payrolls added 57,000 in June and the jobless rate hit 4.2%, with April and May payroll figures cut by 74,000, according to Labor Department data. Labor-force participation dropped to 61.5%, the lowest mark since March 2021.

Adam Sarhan, CEO at 50 Park Investments, said the jobs report “takes the pressure off the Fed to raise rates” right now. Ellen Hazen, chief market strategist at F.L. Putnam Investment Management, called it “the bigger question” why the labor force had shrunk so sharply. Stephen Stanley, chief U.S. economist at Santander U.S. Capital Markets, said policymakers are likely to see the labor market as “neither too hot nor too cold” but thinks the market’s rate-hike repricing doesn’t make sense. Reuters

Friday premarket/futures itemLatest confirmed readInvestor read
NYSE/Nasdaq cash stocksClosedNo regular U.S. stock session
S&P 500 futures+0.3%Bid for rate relief sticks into holiday
Nasdaq futures+1.0%Trying a bounce after chip names slid
Brent crude$71.87Less inflation threat, but not out
WTI crude$68.63Energy shock keeps its place in rate story

Oil traded close to pre-war levels, giving some support to rate-sensitive assets. Brent crude was up 7 cents at $71.87 a barrel, while U.S. crude lost 6 cents to $68.63. Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade, said there was “guarded optimism” as traders tracked peace talks and traffic in the Strait of Hormuz. Reuters

The risk is still there. James Rossiter, who leads global economics at TD Securities, told Reuters that shipping was already the firm’s largest expected risk this year before the Iran war started. He said rerouted ships hurt global capacity. Dan Coatsworth at AJ Bell said investors should “keep watching the U.S. tech stocks” after the recent pullback. Reuters

Next week’s calendar is lighter on data, but rates come back into focus. MarketWatch’s list includes S&P final U.S. services PMI and ISM services data set for Monday, the May trade balance on Tuesday, wholesale inventories and the June Fed minutes out Wednesday, and weekly jobless claims and existing home sales Thursday.

DateU.S. itemWhy it matters for stocks
Monday, July 6S&P final U.S. services PMI; ISM servicesFirst look at services demand after soft jobs report
Tuesday, July 7May trade balanceDollar and GDP reading
Wednesday, July 8Fed June meeting minutes; wholesale inventories; consumer creditClues on rates and consumer leverage
Thursday, July 9Initial jobless claims; existing home salesJobs follow-up and rate impact on housing
Friday, July 10None scheduledSetup for earnings as inflation data comes next week

PepsiCo and Delta Air Lines will give early reads on second-quarter earnings next week, Reuters reported. Investors also will look at minutes from Kevin Warsh’s first Fed meeting as chair, with markets having taken the June decision as hawkish, according to the same report.

Leokadia Głogulska is a financial and technology journalist at TS2.tech, covering stocks, artificial intelligence, space technology and global market developments. She graduated from Wrocław University of Economics and Business and previously worked in financial analysis before moving into business journalism. Her reporting focuses on helping readers understand the market trends, companies and technologies shaping the global economy.

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