Morning Bid: Churning chips

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Skip to navigationSkip to main contentSkip to right columnADVERTISEMENTBy Mike DolanThu, July 2, 2026 at 12:44 PM GMT+2 4 min readBy Mike DolanJuly 2 (Reuters) -What matters in U.S. and global markets todayBy Mike Dolan, Editor-at-Large, Finance and MarketsThe U.S. jobs report will clearly dominate the day ahead for markets, but there's been a hefty pullback in red-hot chip stocks around the world as the second half of the year ‌gets underway.Given the shortened week, quarter-end trading quirks and the looming payrolls report, it may be unwise to read too much into this week's market ‌moves, but it does appear there's some degree of profit-taking and portfolio shuffling going on.I'll get into that and more below.But first, check out my latest column on the U.S. economy's seemingly unstoppable expansion over the ​past 17 years and what it's meant for the equity bull market.And listen to the latest episode of the Morning Bid daily podcast, where I dig into June's expected job numbers. Subscribe to hear Reuters journalists discuss the biggest news in markets and finance seven days a week.Finally, Morning Bid Weekend will be off tomorrow for the Independence Day holiday.CHURNING CHIPSThe U.S. SOX chip index fell back about 6% on Wednesday with no obvious trigger, even though the wider S&P 500 ended flat and the equal-weighted index hit new highs. Asia stocks took ‌their lead from the SOX today, with sizeable declines in ⁠big chip and tech equipment makers in Seoul and Tokyo.Meta, which had lost about 15% in the first half of the year, was an outlier stateside, rising nearly 9% on Wednesday on a report that it was building out its cloud business and planned to sell ⁠excess AI computing capacity.Also on the tech front, the FT reported on Thursday that OpenAI would offer the U.S. government a 5% stake.Meantime, today's payrolls report is expected to show another brisk gain of 110,000 jobs last month - well above the so-called breakeven rate needed to keep the unemployment rate steady. There was a slight miss in ADP's private sector jobs report on Wednesday, ​but ​not enough to shift any Federal Reserve expectations.Fed Chair Kevin Warsh was equivocal in his take on ​things in Portugal on Wednesday, insisting the central bank was committed ‌to getting inflation back to 2% but noting there had been improvement in the inflation picture in recent weeks.Although Fed futures still see a rate hike by October, crude oil prices continue to decline amid more positive noises about talks between U.S. and Iranian officials this week. Brent crude was trading at around $71 per barrel early on Thursday.And in Europe there was good news on the inflation front on Wednesday, as euro zone headline CPI came in at 2.8%, well below expectations for 3%. That offers some hope that the ECB can avoid further rate hikes now that energy prices are retreating.Terms and Privacy PolicyEU DSA contactPrivacy & Cookie SettingsMore Info