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Broadcom’s Q2 revenue miss and strong US jobs data drove the S&P 500 down 2.6% on June 5, with semiconductor ETFs falling 12% and Asian markets tumbling.
Broadcom’s second‑quarter revenue fell short of consensus, sending the S&P 500 down 2.6% on June 5 and triggering a broad tech sell‑off that spilled into Asian markets.
| At a glance | |
|---|---|
| S&P 500 | –2.6% |
| Broadcom (AVGO) | –7.9% (shares down 19.9% over three days) |
| Nasdaq Composite | –4.3% (two‑day decline) |
| iShares Semiconductor ETF | –12.3% (two‑day decline) |
Broadcom reported Q2 2026 fiscal revenue of $22.19 billion, a 48% year‑on‑year rise but below the $22.27 billion consensus estimate from analysts surveyed by the London Stock Exchange Group [1]. The company also kept its 2027 AI‑chip sales guidance at $100 billion, a level that investors had expected to be raised after a year of explosive AI growth. The modest miss and unchanged outlook lowered expectations for the AI semiconductor market, prompting a sharp sell‑off in Broadcom shares and a cascade to other AI‑related stocks [1].
The earnings disappointment coincided with a surprisingly strong US jobs report released on June 5, which showed 70,000 jobs added in May—far above the 14,000‑job monthly average [1]. The robust labour market reduces the likelihood of near‑term Fed rate cuts and raises the chance of a rate hike to curb inflation, a scenario that is especially painful for high‑growth tech stocks that rely on cheap capital [1].
Broadcom’s decline quickly spread to the broader semiconductor sector. The Nasdaq Composite fell 4.3% over the two sessions ending June 5, while the iShares Semiconductor ETF, which tracks the NYSE Semiconductor Index, dropped 12.3% in the same period [1]. Asian markets mirrored the US move; Korean exchanges halted trading for 20 minutes after an 8% fall, driven by losses in semiconductor heavyweights SK Hynix and Samsung [1].
Analysts linked the sell‑off to “a firestorm of selling” sparked by the jobs data, with big‑tech stocks bearing the brunt of waning confidence [1]. The episode underscores how tightly AI‑related equities are tied to both corporate earnings and macro‑economic signals such as employment strength and interest‑rate expectations.
Broadcom’s modest revenue miss, combined with unexpectedly strong US employment figures, reignited concerns that the AI‑driven rally may be losing momentum, leaving investors to reassess the durability of tech‑heavy valuations. The next round of macro data will determine whether the sell‑off is a short‑term correction or the start of a broader shift away from high‑growth semiconductor stocks.
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AI-assisted synthesis by the TrendWatcher Editorial Desk · sourced from 2 outlets · Jun 23, 2026 · How we report
Investors are reacting to concerns about sustained AI spending, higher‑for‑longer interest rates, elevated inflation, and global market weakness, which together are rotating capital out of growth stocks.
No; a crash typically involves a drop of more than 10% in an index over several days, whereas the June 23 declines were smaller and reflect a pullback rather than a crash.
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