WSJ What’s News - What’s News in Markets: AI Reality Check, Oil’s Tipping Point, Crypto Winter
Episode Date: June 6, 2026Why did Broadcom's strong earnings trigger a chip selloff? And what does the standoff in the Middle East mean for oil prices? Plus, what’s bitcoin's value when no one is paying attention? Host Imani... Moise discusses the biggest stock moves of the week and the news that drove them. Sign up for the WSJ's free Markets A.M. newsletter. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive.
The Price is Right Fortune Pick.
BetMGM and GameSense remind you to play responsibly.
19 plus to wager.
Ontario only.
Please play responsibly.
If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
please contact Connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2,600 to speak to an advisor,
free of charge.
BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario.
Hey listeners, it's Saturday, June 6th.
I'm Imani Moise for the Wall Street Journal.
And this is what's news in markets, our look at the biggest stock moves of the week
and the news that drove them.
Let's dive in.
Markets hit the brakes this week, with major indexes falling after setting record highs just last week.
A strong jobs report and rising tensions in the Middle East doked fears about inflation.
A conservative revenue outlook from one of the world's biggest chipmakers
cause investors to question whether AI growth expectations were beginning to lose touch with reality.
And a sale by one of Bitcoin's biggest bulls triggered a crypto sell-off.
The tech-heavy NASDAQ tumbled 4.7%, and the SMP snapped a nine-week winning streak, ending 2.6% lower.
Those were the worst weekly declines for those indexes so far this year.
The Dow declined 0.3%.
The AI trade hit a speed bump this week as one of the industry's biggest chipmakers,
prompted investors to rethink some of their loftiest expectations.
Broadcom reported an explosive 48% surge in revenue
and said it expects to generate more than $100 billion in annual AI semiconductor revenue by next year.
Most people would think that those numbers would send a stock soaring.
Instead, investors erased roughly $300 billion from Broadcom's market value in a single day.
Now, let's make that make sense.
Analysts say the decline wasn't really about Broadcom's results.
It was about its outlook.
Investors have gotten used to AI chip companies exceeding expectations and raising their
outlooks.
Invidia has repeatedly blown past expectations with its quarterly numbers, and earlier this week,
ST Microelectronics nearly doubled its revenue guidance from above $500 million to well
above $1 billion.
But Broadcom held the line.
Executives stuck with the company's previous forecast, suggesting growth remained strong,
but maybe not accelerating as quickly as investors had hoped.
Broadcom shares ended the week more than 13%.
The reaction rippled across the chip sector, as investors reconsidered just how much future growth is already priced into some of the market's biggest winners.
Shares of Micron dropped 11 percent, and AMD fell roughly 10 percent.
The conflict in the Middle East came back into focus on Wall Street this week, after fresh missile attacks raised questions about the future of the Strait of Ormuse, helping to make energy the best-performing sector in the S&P 500.
Brent crude rose about 2% to $93.9.9 a barrel as another week passed by without a peace deal,
reinforcing concerns that supply disruptions could last longer than expected.
Until recently, investors had largely looked past the war, betting that ample oil inventories
would help cushion the global economy from supply disruptions.
But that assumption is starting to crack.
Commodity trading giant Trafalgarra warned this week that energy markets are approaching an inflection point,
as inventory shrink and supply constraints persist.
If a peace deal is reached soon, analysts say it could take months for oil production and shipping flows to fully recover.
The S&P Energy Index rose about 2.5% over the week.
And even after this week's chip stock slump, the AI trade has helped push major U.S. indexes to record highs.
But there's one corner of the market missing out on the rally, crypto.
Bitcoin has fallen 30% this year and lost about half of its values in speaking at above,
$126,000 last October.
Analysts say one reason is that crypto is no longer the market's favorite speculative trade.
For much of the past year, investors who once chased Bitcoin gains have instead been piling
into AI stocks.
While Bitcoin struggles, semiconductor stocks are dominating Wall Street's leaderboard for the year.
One crypto trader put it bluntly.
What Bitcoin needs is for some air to come out of the AI trade.
The shift in investor attention is now beginning to pressure some of crypto's biggest believers.
Strategy, one of Bitcoin's most outspoken supporters, sold a portion of its holdings for the first
time since the last crypto winter in 2022.
The moves rattled investors because Strategy Executive Chairman Michael Saylor built a reputation
on a simple message. Never sell your Bitcoin. Shares of crypto-linked companies ended
the week lower. Strategy tumbled about 24%. Coinbase slipped 19%. And Robin Hood dropped more than
12%. And now you know what's news in markets this week.
You can read about more stocks that moved on the week's news in our live markets coverage on WSJ.com.
Today's show was produced by Anthony Bansy, with supervising producer Melanie Roy.
I'm Imani-Mauiz.
Have a great weekend and catch you next Saturday.
