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​Stock Market Today: Dow Rises as Weak Jobs Report Eases Fed Fears, Nasdaq Slips on Tech Weakness

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U.S. stocks were mixed Thursday as investors weighed a sharply weaker-than-expected June jobs report against lingering pressure in chip and AI infrastructure stocks. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose roughly 0.6%, while the S&P 500 slipped about 0.2% and the Nasdaq Composite fell nearly 1% as technology shares remained under pressure.

The softer payrolls reading cooled some expectations for additional Federal Reserve rate hikes, giving investors a reason to buy more defensive and blue-chip names. Still, the broader market stayed cautious heading into America’s 250th Independence Day holiday, with U.S.-Iran technical talks in Doha and renewed AI infrastructure concerns keeping risk appetite in check.

Market Movers:

Jobs Report Cools Rate Hike Expectations

The June jobs report showed the U.S. economy added just 57,000 jobs, far below expectations for 113,000 and sharply below May’s revised gain of 129,000. April and May payrolls were also revised lower, reinforcing signs that hiring momentum is slowing after a stronger spring. The unemployment rate ticked down to 4.2%, slightly better than expected, but the weak headline job gain helped temper confidence that the Fed will raise rates soon. Traders still see a rate hike as possible later this year, but odds eased after the report suggested the labor market may be losing steam.

Tech Stocks Stay Under Pressure

The Nasdaq lagged as chip and AI infrastructure stocks continued to struggle after a global tech sell-off. South Korean chipmakers SK Hynix and Samsung Electronics sank sharply overnight, adding to concerns that enthusiasm around AI spending may be running ahead of near-term fundamentals. Pressure also returned to U.S. semiconductor names as investors reassessed the impact of Meta’s potential move into selling excess AI compute. That raised questions about whether the AI infrastructure boom could eventually create too much capacity, weighing on chipmakers and cloud infrastructure providers.

Oil Falls as U.S.-Iran Talks Show Progress

Oil prices dropped for a fourth straight session after Qatar said there had been “positive progress” in U.S.-Iran talks. Brent crude fell below $71 a barrel, while West Texas Intermediate slipped under $68, bringing prices close to levels last seen before the early stages of the conflict. Lower oil prices helped ease some inflation concerns, though investors remain cautious because talks have not yet produced a breakthrough. Negotiations are expected to continue after funeral processions for former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on July 9.

Looking Ahead

Markets will be closed Friday for Independence Day, leaving investors to digest the weak jobs report, falling oil prices, and renewed pressure in technology stocks over the long weekend. The softer labor data gives the Fed more reason to stay patient, but inflation remains elevated enough to keep a later-year rate hike on the table. Next week, attention will return to U.S.-Iran talks, oil market stability, and whether chip stocks can recover from the latest AI infrastructure sell-off. With the second half of the year underway, investors are likely to stay focused on whether economic growth can slow just enough to cool inflation without damaging the broader market rally.

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