The S&P 500 tech index fell more than 4% on Tuesday as a rebound in technology shares faded and investors remained wary of inflation risks ahead of key economic data, according to Reuters and Virginia Business reporting on June 9, 2026.
The Nasdaq Composite dropped on Tuesday after a brief rally on Monday, with the Philadelphia SE Semiconductor Index sliding as much as 8.6% before paring some losses, according to Virginia Business. The decline marked a resumption of selling pressure on Wall Street tech stocks that had dominated trading for weeks.
The latest wall street tech stock selloff was driven by a mix of profit-taking in semiconductor shares and concerns about rising inflation, according to analysts cited by Investopedia. Navellier analysts wrote that “it appears to be a case of profit-taking in the semiconductors,” noting that semiconductor stocks had soared earlier in the year. The American Prospect cited two main factors: second thoughts about the astronomical valuations of tech companies and rising inflation concerns.
This selloff continues a pattern that began on June 5, 2026, when the Nasdaq Composite fell 4.18%, its worst single day since April 2025, according to CNN. That day, U.S.-traded chipmakers lost about $1.3 trillion in market value, with major AI-related stocks including Nvidia taking sharp losses, according to Reuters.
Investors are now focused on upcoming inflation data and a Federal Reserve policy decision next week, according to the Wall Street Journal. The strength of economic data—particularly a strong jobs report—has raised expectations for interest rate hikes, which typically weigh on high-growth technology stocks that depend on cheap borrowing costs. The pullback in tech shares reflects concern that elevated rates could pressure valuations that had expanded significantly during the AI-driven rally of recent months.
The April 2025 crash, triggered by tariff announcements, showed how quickly sentiment can shift in tech-heavy markets. That period saw equities recover in the last three weeks of April 2025, according to market historian Aswath Damodaran, suggesting that sharp selloffs in this sector have historically been followed by rebounds when sentiment stabilizes.
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Chris Martin is a US economics and current affairs journalist covering the intersection of policy, markets, and everyday financial life. With a background in financial reporting and a sharp eye for the stories behind the numbers, Chris brings clarity to some of the most complex issues shaping the American economy today. At ECIKS.org, Chris covers breaking developments across domestic economic policy, business strategy, Wall Street movements, and political decisions that ripple through financial markets. His reporting blends rigorous data analysis with accessible storytelling making critical information useful for investors, entrepreneurs, and engaged citizens alike.
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