US stocks mostly rose on Thursday despite fresh doubts about President Trump’s ability to end the war with Iran and a potential shake-up in the booming AI trade.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI) rose over 1.8%, or 875 points, to notch a fresh record high as investors rotated into healthcare and financial stocks. The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC) added 0.5%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was little changed, recovering from steeper losses earlier in the session.
Broadcom (AVGO) shares sank more than 12% after its AI chip forecast disappointed, raising questions about the strength of the broadly booming AI trade.
Meanwhile, on Wednesday evening, following the most serious escalation between the US and Iran since the April ceasefire took effect, the House of Representatives voted to end the war in a rebuke to Trump. Earlier in the day, stocks retreated from records, and oil rose as hopes for a quick Iran deal faded.
Elsewhere, SpaceX confirmed in a new filing that it plans to secure a record-breaking $75 billion in its IPO on June 12. Relaxed rules that could fast-track SpaceX’s inclusion in index funds mean that 401(k) investors could wind up invested in the company without buying a single share.
Wall Street digested two additional readings on the labor market on Thursday ahead of Friday’s May jobs report. Weekly jobless claims ticked up to 225,000 for the week ending May 30, while layoff data from outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed job cuts also rose.
LIVE 12 updates
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Dow posts record high as investors rotates into healthcare and financials
The Dow Jones Industrial Average hit a record high on Thursday as investors rotated out of semiconductors and into cyclical and defensive sectors such as Financials and Healthcare.
AI leaders Nvidia (NVDA) and Alphabet (GOOG, GOOGL) also helped lift the blue chip index as investors bought the dip.
The S&P 500 (^GSPC) gained 0.3% while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC) was little changed, recovering from losses earlier in the session.
Broadcom (AVGO) stock fell nearly 12%, trimming steeper losses after the company’s outlook didn’t live up to Wall Street’s high expectations.
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Semiconductor stocks trim losses after Broadcom results spark sector sell-off
Semiconductor stocks, including Intel (INTC), AMD (AMD), Arm Holdings (ARM) trimmed losses on Thursday after the broader chip sector came under pressure following a disappointing outlook from custom AI chip designer Broadcom (AVGO).
High-flying memory and storage names Micron (MU) and SanDisk (SNDK) more than 5% and 3% respecitvely, recovering from a steeper sell-off. Meanwhile shares of Marvell Technology (MRVL), which had opened in the red, flipped into green territory to rise as much as 5%.
A weaker-than-expected AI chip outlook from Broadcom, coupled with the company’s decision to reiterate rather than raise its 2026 guidance, sent shares of the Palo Alto-based company plunging as much as 15% before trimming losses.
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Better and Coinbase issue the first crypto-backed conventional mortgage
Yahoo Finance’s Hal Bundrick reports:
We may look back on this in a few years and say, “Remember how we thought that was a big deal back then? Now, it’s everywhere.” The first cryptocurrency-backed conventional mortgage has been issued to a couple in Michigan.
If the future of finance is tokenization, this will be the first of many. Converting traditional real-world assets — such as currency, real estate, stocks, and bonds — into digital tokens on a blockchain is expected to reframe the world’s financial infrastructure.
And the future began in June 2026.
Read more here.
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Broadcom’s sell-off just entered megacap history
Yahoo Finance’s Jared Blikre reports:
Broadcom (AVGO) is not just having a bad post-earnings pullback. The stock is down nearly 15%, erasing roughly $320 billion in market value and putting it among the biggest single-stock wipeouts of the megacap era.
The trigger was Broadcom’s AI outlook. The company beat quarterly earnings expectations, but its AI chip sales forecast disappointed investors after a huge run in the stock, pressuring the broader chip trade.
That’s the hard part about the AI trade right now. The business can still be growing fast, and the stock can still get hit if expectations are even faster.
Read more here.
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