Gains from semiconductor and software stocks send S&P 500, Nasdaq 100 to new record closes
An Nvidia-fueled tech rally powered stocks to new records, though market breadth was weak as only the information technology and energy sectors rose.
Stocks continued to power higher, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 setting new record closing highs, though the Russell 2000 dipped. The S&P 500 has risen for its eighth straight session, its longest winning streak in over a year.
Gains were concentrated in the information technology and energy sectors, as software stocks rallied and oil rose.
On Truth Social, President Trump posted that talks with Iran “are continuing, at a rapid pace,” pushing back against reporting earlier in the day.
Moving higher:
Nvidia climbed after announcing its entry into the laptop market with a new PC “superchip” that will power a fresh line of Windows laptops by Dell and HP.
Nvidia’s new laptop superchip — which uses Arm architecture — sent shares of Arm higher, validating demand for its IP in the PC market.
Jensen Huang’s comments at Computex threw fuel on the AI software trade, lifting Microsoft, Salesforce, ServiceNow, Snowflake, Oracle, Atlassian, Zscaler, Okta, MongoDB, Figma, Asana, and BigBear.ai in a broad software rally.
Salesforce got an additional boost after Bloomberg reported its $50 million investment in Anthropic is now valued at around $5 billion.
AI data center stocks surged after Dell delivered an Nvidia server to CoreWeave, with Dell, CoreWeave, Nebius, and POET Technologies all climbing.
IREN rose after closing a $3.65 billion GPU financing facility to support its Microsoft contract.
Taylor Morrison jumped after Berkshire Hathaway agreed to buy the housebuilder for $6.8 billion.
AMC and Cinemark climbed on record May movie theater attendance.
MGM Resorts surged after a report that Barry Diller is planning a bid for the company.
IBM surged after Barclays initiated coverage with a $350 price target, while a 2025 video of Trump saying the stock will “go up a lot more” went viral.
Nio gained after reporting a 62% surge in May deliveries, with Chinese EV peer XPeng also climbing after sales mostly rebounded.
HP climbed as one of the manufacturers set to build laptops powered by Nvidia’s new chip.
HYPE hit an all-time high as its treasury companies proved to be the only profitable ones in the space, with treasury stock Hyperliquid Strategies also climbing.
Moving lower:
Nvidia’s entry into the laptop market with a new PC superchip pressured incumbent chipmakers, with Intel, AMD, and Qualcomm all falling on the competitive threat.
Strategy sank after revealing it sold bitcoin.
Apple slipped as Nvidia’s push into the laptop market raised questions about competitive pressure on MacBooks.
Bitcoin continued to dip after closing May in the red, raising questions about whether June will bring more downside.
