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US Stock Futures Higher
Jun 8 2026 5:56PM
Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures were higher early Monday as chip stocks rebounded from Friday’s rout and President Donald Trump tried to maintain a fragile ceasefire despite Iran and Israel trading strikes.

S&P 500 futures
 and Nasdaq 100 futures
 were up 0.7% and 1.3%, respectively. Futures tied to the Dow rose
 136 points, or 0.3%.

Shares of Micron Technology
, the memory chipmaker that’s led the latest leg of the bull market, were up more than 5% in premarket trading after falling 13% on Friday. Shares of Nvidia
 and Broadcom
 were also higher.

The Nasdaq Composite dropped 4.2% on Friday, its worst drop since April 2025 as investors took profits on chip stocks on concern the shares had gone too far given the uncertain economic backdrop. The iShares Semiconductor ETF
 was nearly 4% higher in early trading Monday after plunging 10% on Friday, its worst day in more than six years.

Asia-Pacific markets tanked Monday in response to the Nasdaq drop Friday, with South Korea’s benchmark Kospi leading declines, falling more than 8% to end at 7,484.41. Japan’s Nikkei 225 dropped 3.85% to 64,024.6.

Strikes by Iran on Sunday raised fresh concerns about the stability of the ceasefire between Washington and Tehran. The reported missile attack followed a post on X by Iranian Parliament Speaker MB Ghalibaf, who argued that the U.S. naval blockade and alleged breaches of agreements related to Lebanon constitute violations of the ceasefire.

WTI crude oil traded higher by more than 1% to around $92 a barrel as Israel carried out a “large-scale strike on strategic defense systems” on Monday, according to the IDF X account, in response to Iran attacks. But Trump said Israel and Iran “are looking to do an immediate ceasefire” and that negotiations were proceeding despite the attacks. Trump earlier ordered that Iran and Israel “must immediately stop” attacking.

Oil traded off its highest levels of the session after Trump’s comments.

Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs later told CNBC Monday that the country’s military has ended military operations against Israel. However, Iran warned it would restart hostilities if Israel continues attacking Lebanon.

“The stock market may be becoming a victim of its own success,” said Callie Cox, chief market strategist at Ritholtz Wealth Management. “The job market has turned around, yet the threat of persistently high inflation seems to be the risk looming on everyone’s minds.”

“Growth and momentum have outpaced almost everything since the March lows,” she added. “That’s not what you’d expect in a high-rate, high-inflation environment, and these strategies may be vulnerable to disappointment if cost pressures stay elevated.”

In the week ahead, investors will be focused on inflation data and the public debut of Elon Musk’s SpaceX on Friday. The offering is expected to be one of the largest in Wall Street history and could be the market’s biggest test yet of the AI valuation narrative.

“Blockbuster offerings have marked the peak of excess in past market cycles, so there seems to be an awkward silence around what this could signal for sentiment,” Cox said. “Many investors seem restrained and skeptical, but can that temperament exist when the biggest IPO of all time is on deck?”