Market reaction to the May jobs report
SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust shares dropped roughly 1.0% in morning trading to trade at $749.58 following a hotter-than-expected labor market report from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. The nonfarm payrolls figure for May rose by 172,000, about double the consensus estimate of 85,000, while the unemployment rate remained unchanged at 4.3%.
Cooper Howard, director of fixed income research and strategy at the Schwab Center for Financial Research, characterized the payrolls surprise as "a massive upside surprise." Investors interpreted the stronger employment reading as a potential catalyst for tighter monetary policy, sending the benchmark 10-year Treasury note yield higher to 4.54% and prompting a risk-off response across equities.
How the data altered Fed expectations
The May jobs shock accelerated an ongoing hawkish repricing of Fed policy prospects. Market participants moved to fully price in a Federal Reserve rate hike by the end of 2026 - a notable shift from prior expectations that had pushed the possibility as far back as March 2027. That change in the interest rate outlook placed particular pressure on rate-sensitive growth stocks, which constitute a sizable portion of the S&P 500.
The jobs report also included an upward revision for April payrolls to 214,000. Sector-level gains in May were led by leisure and hospitality, local government, and healthcare, according to the BLS release.
Wider market moves and sector rotation
The stronger labor-market print came amid an ongoing rotation out of artificial-intelligence-linked names, leaving technology and semiconductor groups vulnerable. The prior session's selloff in Broadcom, after its AI-chip revenue forecast disappointed many investors, had already knocked semiconductor peers lower and exposed the tech-heavy indices to further weakness when yields moved up.
On the session, the S&P 500 was down about 1.0% and the NASDAQ fell roughly 1.6%, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average held up better with a smaller decline near 0.3% as investors rotated into more defensive sectors including healthcare and financials.
Technical backdrop and profit-taking risk
The technical setting added to the downward pressure. The SPDR S&P 500 ETF had been trading close to its 52-week high of $760.40 following an extended rally. Major indexes had been on track for a potential 10th consecutive weekly gain - a streak last seen in late 1985 - which left the market susceptible to profit-taking once macroeconomic data shifted the interest-rate narrative decisively toward a hawkish stance.
In short, the combination of a hotter-than-expected labor market, a swift repricing of Fed policy timing, and a fragile technical setup around stretched gains created conditions for the pullback observed in equities.
What to watch next
Market participants will be watching how sustained labor-market strength influences Fed communications and the path of longer-term yields, as well as whether the rotation away from AI-related and other growth-oriented stocks continues. The interplay between macroeconomic data, rate expectations, and sector leadership will likely dictate near-term market direction.