Stock market today: Dow, S&P 500, Nasdaq sink as jobs report fuels Fed hike bets, chip stocks sell off

US stocks fell sharply on Friday, with tech leading the way down after the release of May’s jobs report blew past expectations, while a rotation out of tech stocks and chipmakers continued.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) fell 0.7%. The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) slid 1.8%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) sank over 3%.
The May jobs report far exceeded expectations, with US employers adding 172,000 jobs last month, well above economists’ expectations of around 88,000. The unemployment rate held steady at 4.3%.
But the strong report also fueled bets on a Federal Reserve rate hike at some point this year, as the labor market stabilizes amid high inflation. Traders are now fully pricing in a rate hike from the central bank by the end of the year, even as President Trump continues to call for cuts as Kevin Warsh, his appointee to chair the Fed, takes the helm.
Meanwhile, the rotation out of chipmakers and tech stocks gathered apace. Broadcom (AVGO) earnings sent shockwaves through the AI trade earlier this week, and shares continued plummeting on Friday. Nvidia (NVDA) fell by more than 4%, and Micron (MU), AMD (AMD), and Intel (INTC) all sank by more than 8%.
The S&P 500 is at risk of snapping a historic weekly winning streak. The benchmark index is looking for a 10th straight week of gains, the longest such run since 1985.
Elsewhere, the fragile ceasefire between the US and Iran, along with reports of stalled negotiations, continue to fuel uncertainty on Wall Street, even as President Trump assures that talks are in their “final” stages.
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Tech stock on pace for their worst day since April 2025
Tech (XLK) stocks were on pace for their worst day since April 2025 on Friday, before the post-Liberation Day pivot from President Trump.
The sector declined more than 5% as Big tech, semiconductors, and software stocks all took a hit amid the prospect of higher interest rates.
A hotter-than-expected jobs report has raised the expectations that the Federal Reserve will be forced ot raise interest rates to combat an overheated economy and rising inflation.
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Bitcoin extends decline as broader market sinks
Bitcoin (BTC-USD)extended its decline along with the broader market on Friday, sinking more than 2% to $61,000.
As Yahoo Finance’ s Brian Sozzi points out, bitcoin prices have fallen below their 200-day moving average for the first time since 2023. Historically, this has made for a good buying opportunity.
Traders widely consider the 200-day moving average to be the “ultimate trendsetter” in financial markets. It represents the average closing price of a stock, digital asset, or index over the past 200 trading days, effectively smoothing out daily “noise” to reveal the long-term trajectory.
Bitcoin prices have fallen to their lowest level since February. Prices are down more than 14% in a single week and 21% over the past four weeks.
Bitcoin reached its definitive all-time high in October 2025, when the cryptocurrency staged an unprecedented, massive bull run that peaked around $125,000.
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