Saturday, June 06, 2026

The Market Just Crashed Because Good News Is Now Bad News.

The Market Just Crashed Because Good News Is Now Bad News. Here's What Happened — And What You Should Do About It.

The Market Just Crashed Because Good News Is Now Bad News. Here's What Happened — And What You Should Do About It.

Friday night Singapore time, Wall Street had its worst day since October. The Nasdaq cratered 4.2%. Over a trillion dollars in market cap vaporised in a single session. And the trigger? A company beat its earnings. And the US economy added more jobs than anyone expected. Welcome to 2026, where good news sends markets into a tailspin.

If you woke up this morning, opened your brokerage app, and felt your stomach drop — you're not alone. If you're in any tech or AI-adjacent stocks (and frankly, who in Singapore's US Growth Portfolio isn't), the weekend just got a little heavier.

Let's break down exactly what happened, why it happened, and most importantly — what you should actually do about it.


-4.2%Nasdaq Composite Friday close
-2.6%S&P 500 drop — worst day since Oct
-13%Broadcom (AVGO) single-day crash
172KUS jobs added in May — double expectations

Two Hammers Hit at Once

Friday's selloff wasn't caused by one thing. It was two separate storylines colliding on the same day, each bad enough on its own, lethal in combination.

Hammer #1: Broadcom's guidance disappointment.

Broadcom — one of the biggest AI chip plays in the world — reported Q2 2026 earnings on Wednesday night. The numbers were genuinely impressive: revenue of US$22.19 billion, up 48% year-on-year. Earnings per share beat Wall Street estimates. Free cash flow surged 60%. By any normal measure, a fantastic quarter.

The market sold it down 13%.

Why? Because Broadcom didn't raise its full-year guidance. In the AI trade, beating isn't enough. You have to beat and raise — deliver better results than expected, then promise even better results ahead. Broadcom said their AI chip business remains strong and they still expect semiconductor revenue to exceed US$100 billion next fiscal year. But they didn't upgrade the near-term number. And for a stock that had run hard into the print, that was enough for investors to head for the exit.

The AI expectation problem in one sentence When a company grows revenue 48% year-on-year and its stock drops 13%, you know the market has priced in something much better than 48%. That gap between reality and expectation is called valuation risk — and it's been building quietly in chip stocks all year.

The selloff rippled immediately. NVDA dropped nearly 6% on Friday. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index — which tracks the chip sector — plunged over 6% before recovering to close down around 2%. Samsung and SK Hynix in Seoul got absolutely battered the following morning, with SK Hynix dropping nearly 10% in a single session.

Hammer #2: The jobs report from hell.

On Friday morning US time, the Bureau of Labor Statistics released May's nonfarm payrolls data. The consensus expectation was around 85,000 new jobs. The actual number? 172,000 — roughly double what anyone anticipated.

In any normal world, a strong jobs report is unambiguously good news. More people working means a healthy economy. But the market isn't living in a normal world right now. It's living in a world where a strong economy means the Federal Reserve has less reason to cut interest rates — and might even have to raise them.

The 10-year US Treasury yield immediately jumped above 4.5%. The 30-year crossed 5%. Those are psychologically important levels. Higher bond yields make fixed income more attractive relative to equities. They also raise borrowing costs for the companies spending billions building AI data centres. The math on the entire AI infrastructure trade gets harder when money costs more.

"The economy is doing too well. The market hates it."

The Timeline of the Carnage

Wednesday Night (SGT Thursday)
Broadcom posts strong Q2 earnings — revenue up 48% YoY — but fails to raise FY2026 guidance. Stock drops 13-15% in after-hours.
Friday Pre-Market (SGT Friday evening)
US May jobs report drops: 172,000 new jobs vs 85,000 expected. Bond yields spike. Rate cut expectations collapse. Futures already down hard.
Friday US Session
Nasdaq -4.2%. S&P 500 -2.6%. Dow -695 points. Meta drops 5.5% on news it may issue stock to fund AI infrastructure spending. Investors rotate into healthcare and consumer staples — Colgate +4%, Coca-Cola +3%, J&J +2%.
Saturday Morning Asia Open
Korea leads Asian losses. Kospi -5.5%. SK Hynix -9.9%. Samsung -6.4%. Nikkei -1.3%. Singapore STI slightly lower but relatively insulated.

Is This a Correction or a Collapse?

Let's be honest: nobody knows with certainty. Anyone who tells you otherwise is selling something.

What I can tell you is what the data actually says. Before Friday's drop, the S&P 500 was up 7.9% for 2026. It had just posted nine consecutive winning weeks. It had hit a series of all-time highs. The AI trade had driven a furious run that pushed valuations in chip stocks to levels that assumed flawless execution for years into the future.

Friday was the first losing week in ten. That's not a collapse. That's a correction within an uptrend. The S&P 500 is still up on the year. The Nasdaq, despite Friday's 4.2% drop, is still materially higher than it was in January.

The uncomfortable truth is that corrections like this are normal. They feel catastrophic in the moment because our brains anchor to last week's portfolio value and experience the drop as a loss, even when the longer-term picture is still positive. That's human psychology, not market reality.

Context matters The last time the Nasdaq fell this hard in a single session was April 2025, during the tariff tantrum when the Trump administration threatened 100% tariffs on Chinese goods. That looked apocalyptic at the time. The S&P 500 subsequently rallied back and hit record highs. Markets have a way of making every correction feel like the end — and then recovering anyway.

What's Actually at Risk Here

I want to be straight with you, because I know a lot of Singaporean retail investors are sitting on US tech and AI positions right now. Here's what the real risks are — no sugarcoating.

Valuations were stretched. The AI trade has been running on narrative and expectation as much as fundamentals. Broadcom is still trading at a forward P/E of around 37 even after Friday's drop. NVDA's valuation has baked in extraordinary growth for years. When expectations are this high, any stumble — even a small one — can trigger outsized selling. We knew this going in. That's the nature of growth investing.

Rate cuts are now off the table for longer. With 172,000 jobs added in May and the Fed already watching inflation, the market is now pricing in the possibility of a rate hike later this year. If that happens, high-multiple tech stocks face a genuine headwind. The AI infrastructure buildout becomes more expensive to fund. That's not fatal, but it's a real constraint.

Bond yields above 4.5% are a problem for tech valuations. The discount rate used to value future cash flows just went up. Mathematically, that compresses the present value of those cash flows. All else equal, higher long rates = lower fair value for growth stocks. The "all else" never stays equal, but the direction is real.

What's not broken The actual business of AI. Google just committed US$920 million per month to rent 110,000 NVDA GPUs from SpaceX. Meta is spending aggressively. Microsoft and Amazon continue building data centre capacity at scale. The demand for AI infrastructure is not gone — the question is whether the stocks had already priced in more than the near-term fundamentals can support. That's a valuation question, not a business viability question.

What I'm Actually Doing With My Portfolio

I'll be direct, because I know some of you come here for the honest take, not the reassuring take.

I'm not panic selling. Nothing in Friday's action changed the long-term thesis for quality US tech. NVDA still dominates AI chip infrastructure. The hyperscalers are still spending. The secular tailwind is still real. A 6% single-day drop in a stock I've held for a year doesn't suddenly make that thesis wrong.

That said, I'm watching my NVDA position closely. I've been running cash-secured puts on NVDA in the US$215–220 range. Friday's drop is actually relevant context for where the real support is — if we test that zone this week, I want to be clear-headed about whether that's a buying opportunity or a falling knife. My DCF has NVDA's fair value north of current prices on conservative assumptions. If the price comes to me, I'll consider it.

What I'm not doing is extrapolating one bad Friday into a market thesis. Corrections within bull markets are the price of admission for the returns that bull markets generate. The investors who sold in April 2025 when the tariff headlines looked catastrophic missed the entire subsequent rally.

The Singaporean Investor's Specific Read

A few things worth noting for those of us managing SGX and US portfolios simultaneously.

The STI is relatively insulated from this. Our Singapore banks and REITs don't move in lockstep with the Nasdaq. In fact, if US rates stay higher for longer, Singapore bank NIMs could benefit — higher rates mean wider spreads. DBS, OCBC, and UOB have been generating exceptional returns in a higher-rate environment. That's one reason the SGX Income Portfolio is genuinely useful as a diversifier. When your US Growth Portfolio has a bad Friday, you want something that doesn't.

For those with USD cash sitting in brokerage accounts — this correction might be the entry window you've been waiting for. If you've been watching NVDA, AVGO, or other chip names and thought valuations were too stretched, they just got cheaper. Not cheap. Cheaper. There's a difference.

And for anyone who woke up this morning thinking about selling everything: ask yourself honestly whether the thesis changed, or just the price. If the answer is "just the price," then selling locks in a loss without solving anything. The thesis is either valid or it isn't. Price action doesn't change the underlying business.

  1. Don't make permanent decisions based on temporary pain. Every major correction in history has felt like the beginning of the end. Most weren't. The ones that were — 2008, COVID — gave ample warning signs beyond a single Friday's earnings disappointment.
  2. Recheck your thesis, not your app. Refresh your conviction in the underlying business, not your portfolio balance. If your investment case for NVDA or any other AI name was built on real fundamentals, one bad session doesn't invalidate it.
  3. If you have dry powder, a plan is better than a reaction. Know your target price for adding. Know what would change your thesis. Have clear rules so emotion doesn't drive the decision at 2am on a Sunday.
  4. Use your SGX income portfolio as the anchor. Dividends from banks and REITs land whether the Nasdaq is up or down. That passive income is exactly what you built it for — psychological ballast when the growth side is volatile.
  5. Watch bond yields this week. If the 10-year settles back below 4.5%, some of Friday's selling will likely reverse. If it pushes higher, brace for continued pressure on high-multiple tech. The bond market is telling the equity market what to do right now.

The Bottom Line

What happened Friday was jarring but not irrational. Broadcom delivered strong results that failed to exceed sky-high expectations. A blowout jobs number killed hopes of near-term Fed cuts and sent bond yields surging. Those two events, landing on the same day, were enough to shake confidence in one of the market's most crowded trades.

That's the AI trade in 2026 in one sentence: extraordinary business results, extraordinary expectations, and very little margin for any disappointment.

The underlying story — that AI infrastructure demand is real, growing, and transformational — has not changed. The question is what price fairly reflects that story. Friday's correction is the market recalibrating that answer. It won't be the last time.

Stay invested. Stay rational. Know your thesis. And maybe hold off on checking your portfolio every twenty minutes this week.

The market will be fine. Whether any individual stock will be fine depends entirely on whether the business is fine. Do that homework now, while the prices are lower and the pressure is real. That's when the best decisions get made.


Thanks for reading. With love & peace, Qiongster.

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