Breadth strongly tilted toward tech and growth: 5 of 11 sectors advancing. XLK leads decisively on Nvidia’s N1X AI-PC chip launch at Computex. Defensives (XLP, XLV) lag as risk appetite surges. ~est. based on pre-market futures positioning.
- Futures (+20): Dow +0.40%, S&P +0.20%, Nasdaq +0.20% — all positive at open
- VIX (0): 15.32 and falling (−2.67%) — volatility suppressed, complacency building
- Newsletters (+10): Reuters Morning Bid: “AI momentum looks set to continue into Monday” — bullish tone
- Sentiment (+10): CNN Fear & Greed index ~est. at 62 (Greed) after May’s record-setting Nasdaq run
- Macro risk (−12): Iran-US military exchanges ongoing, WTI +2.69% supply concern — partial offset
Sources: Reuters Morning Bid (Jun 1), CNBC pre-market, Yahoo Finance Morning Brief
The dominant macro theme entering June is the AI hardware acceleration cycle, supercharged today by Nvidia’s unveiling of the N1X system-on-chip at Computex 2026 in Taipei. The ARM-based N1X — developed with Microsoft and launching in laptops from Dell, HP, ASUS, Lenovo and MSI this fall — directly threatens Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X monopoly on Windows-on-ARM and signals that AI-capable compute is migrating from cloud to edge. This is broadly bullish for the Nvidia supply chain: TSMC, SK Hynix, LPDDR5X memory suppliers, and the software platforms (NOW, CRM, PLTR) that run natively on AI-capable hardware.
On the macro side, Reuters Morning Bid notes the US struck Iranian military sites over the weekend and Iran’s Revolutionary Guards responded by targeting a US base — the latest exchange in a three-month-old conflict. Energy markets are feeling the tension (WTI +2.69% to $89.71), but equity markets are shrugging off geopolitical noise in favor of AI exuberance. The S&P 500 closed May up ~2% for the month; the Nasdaq ended the week up 2.6%. Meanwhile the US Department of Commerce closed a loophole that allowed Nvidia’s most advanced Blackwell processors to flow to Chinese-owned entities outside China — a supply-chain regulatory tightening that could benefit CRWV and NBIS as domestic AI cloud providers.
The week’s key risk event is Friday’s Nonfarm Payrolls report (Jun 5), with JOLTS Tuesday and ADP Wednesday setting the tone. Yahoo Finance notes that sticky inflation and a resilient labor market continue to put the Fed in a wait-and-see posture. ISM Manufacturing PMI for May releases at 10:00 AM ET today — consensus 52.5 vs prior 52.7 — and any upside surprise further validates the soft-landing narrative and adds to the bullish macro backdrop. The Berkshire-Taylor Morrison housing acquisition ($6.8B all-cash) signals that institutional capital is rotating into housing, another read on economic health.
Regime: BULLISH — S&P 500 futures +0.20%, Nasdaq 100 futures +0.20%, Dow futures +0.40% (+227 pts). Filtering long setups only today — no shorts in the Top 5. The primary fuel is Nvidia’s N1X chip debut: a multi-year platform shift that AI software platforms, cloud infra providers, and enterprise SaaS are all racing to monetize. Volatility is suppressed (VIX 15.32), May ended on a record Nasdaq run, and the Reuters morning brief explicitly flagged that “last week’s momentum looks set to continue into Monday.” This is an aggressive long-side day; breakout levels above pre-market highs will be the primary trigger, with the first hour offering the cleanest setups as the N1X narrative spreads across retail and institutional desks.
No major S&P 500 earnings scheduled today. The next major AI/chip earnings catalyst is Broadcom (AVGO) reporting Q2 FY2026 results later this week (expected Thursday after close) — a direct read on enterprise AI networking demand and a key bellwether for the entire AI infrastructure trade. Watch AVGO in the pre-market Thursday for early print leaks.
Jensen Huang unveiled the N1X system-on-chip at Computex 2026, co-developed with Microsoft. The ARM-based SoC packs 20 CPU cores and Blackwell GPU cores delivering RTX 5070-class graphics without a discrete GPU. It supports up to 128GB unified LPDDR5X memory and targets laptops from Dell, HP, ASUS, Lenovo and MSI launching fall 2026. This is Nvidia’s direct assault on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon X franchise — and the catalyst behind today’s broad tech gap.
Reuters Morning Bid reports the US struck Iranian military sites over the weekend. Iran’s Revolutionary Guards retaliated by targeting a US base Monday. Negotiations to end the three-month conflict continue. The main market impact is in energy (WTI +2.69%) and a modest safe-haven bid in treasuries (10Y yield nudging up to 4.47%). Equity markets are largely pricing through the geopolitical noise given AI momentum.
Reuters reports this is Berkshire’s first major acquisition under Greg Abel as CEO — a $6.8B all-cash deal for homebuilder Taylor Morrison. It signals institutional confidence in US housing demand and may have a halo effect on homebuilder and mortgage-adjacent names (TMHC, DHI, LEN, TOL). Not a primary setup today given sector preference, but confirms the economic soft-landing narrative.
Reuters reported yesterday that Blue Origin faces months of delays after a rocket explosion damaged its launch pad, coming at a critical time as Amazon and Blue Origin attempt to challenge SpaceX. This is a direct competitive catalyst for Rocket Lab (RKLB) and Intuitive Machines (LUNR), which appear on the scanner as short setups today — however, note that RKLB itself is down pre-market on other flows, so monitor for any reversal on this news.
Resistance: $125.50 (pre-mkt high), $128 (measured move target), $132 (prior swing high ~est.).
Resistance: $300 (round number + likely heavy supply), $305, $310 (measured move from base).
Resistance: $112 (pre-mkt high area), $115, $120 (next major level).
Resistance: $235, $240, $250 (major psychological).
Resistance: $158 (pre-mkt high), $162 (measured move), $165 (next major level ~est.).
Nvidia’s N1X SoC at Computex 2026 marks the first time Nvidia has entered the Windows PC market directly, combining Blackwell GPU cores (RTX 5070-class) with 20 ARM CPU cores in a single chip designed for laptops. The addressable market is enormous: 250M+ Windows PCs ship annually. This chips away at Qualcomm’s Snapdragon dominance and AMD/Intel’s x86 lock while dramatically expanding the installed base for on-device AI inference. Every AI-capable laptop becomes a new demand node for cloud training (CRWV, NBIS), software subscriptions (NOW, CRM, ADBE), and silicon IP (ARM Holdings). OEM partners Dell, HP, ASUS, Lenovo, and MSI all gap higher as unit economics for premium AI-PC lines improve — this is a multi-quarter revenue tailwind.
Sources: CNBC (May 31, 2026) · Windows Central · TechPowerUp · Tom’s Hardware · FreePress Journal
The N1X announcement triggers an immediate re-rating of enterprise SaaS platforms that monetize AI inference at the application layer. ServiceNow, Salesforce, Adobe, GitLab, and Zscaler all gap 4–10% as the market prices in accelerating adoption curves: when AI is embedded in every device, the software platforms running on those devices see faster user uptake and larger seat counts. This is the “picks and shovels” software equivalent of the N1X hardware launch. Historically, major hardware platform inflection points (iPhone 2007, M1 Mac 2020) produced multi-year software re-rating cycles. The pattern here is identical.
Sources: Yahoo Finance Morning Brief (Jun 1) · Reuters Morning Bid · Scanner data
Edge AI (N1X) does not replace cloud AI — it expands the total demand for GPU cloud capacity, since edge models must be trained, fine-tuned and updated via cloud infrastructure. CoreWeave and Nebius are the two purest-play GPU cloud names in the US market and both gap higher today. Oracle’s cloud AI infrastructure (OCI) is the enterprise-grade alternative, and with its 3.3% pre-market gap and 4.6× RVOL, it represents the most liquid entry into this theme. Additionally, the US Commerce Dept tightening of Nvidia Blackwell chip exports to China concentrates demand in domestic cloud providers — a direct structural tailwind for CRWV and NBIS.
Sources: Reuters (US chip export rule, Jun 1) · TipRanks CRWV vs NBIS · IndexBox NVDA AI portfolio