Rio Times Global Economy Briefing
The Big Three
Jobs blew past forecasts. US payrolls rose 172K in May against an 85K consensus, with unemployment steady at 4.3% — resilience that buried any remaining hope of a rate cut.
The AI trade broke. The Nasdaq plunged 4.2%, its worst day since April 2025, as chips cratered — Micron down 13%, Marvell 16%, AMD 11% — wiping roughly $1 trillion from markets.
The 30-year topped 5% again. The 10-year yield rose above 4.5% as money markets moved to price a 98% chance of a Fed hike this year.
S&P 500
7,384.07
-2.64%
First weekly drop since April
Nasdaq
25,724.96
-4.20%
Worst session since April 2025
Dow Jones
50,866.00
-1.35%
Off Thursday’s record
30Y / 10Y Treasury
5.04 / 4.53
+0.05%
30Y back above 5%
Nonfarm Payrolls (May)
172K
+102%
More than double 85K consensus
Russell 2000
2,810.00
-3.47%
Hit by the yield spike
Fed Hike Odds (2026)
98%
+13pp
Near-certain after jobs print
Nvidia
—
-5.93%
Led the chip rout
United States
Release
Actual
Consensus
Verdict
Nonfarm Payrolls (May)
172K
85K
Huge beat
Unemployment Rate (May)
4.3%
4.3%
Steady
Average Hourly Earnings (YoY)
3.4%
3.4%
In line
Private Payrolls (May)
120K
85K
Beat
Consumer Credit (Apr)
20.73B
17.80B
Above forecast
Europe & United Kingdom
Release
Actual
Consensus
Verdict
Eurozone GDP (QoQ, Q1)
-0.2%
0.1%
Contracted
Eurozone GDP (YoY, Q1)
0.3%
0.8%
Missed
French Industrial Production (MoM, Apr)
0.1%
-0.2%
Beat
UK Halifax House Prices (YoY, May)
0.5%
1.0%
Soft
Asia-Pacific & Emerging Markets
Release
Actual
Consensus
Verdict
India GDP (YoY, Q4)
7.8%
7.2%
Strong beat
India Rate Decision
5.25%
5.25%
Hold
Canada Employment Change (May)
87.8K
10.6K
Huge beat
Canada Unemployment (May)
6.6%
6.9%
Improved
Mexico Consumer Confidence (May)
43.5
44.2 prev
Slipped
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01 Good news is bad news — a jobs blowout breaks the AI rally
The week that set records ended in a rout. US employers added 172K jobs in May, more than double the 85K consensus, with unemployment holding at 4.3% and wages up 3.4%. A strong economy was exactly what equities could not absorb, because it removed the last argument for the Fed to ease.
The reaction was violent. The Nasdaq plunged 4.2%, its worst session since April 2025, the S&P 500 fell 2.64%, and the Russell 2000 dropped 3.47%. The selloff erased roughly $1 trillion in market value, with the chip complex at the centre — Marvell down 16%, Micron 13%, AMD and Intel 11%, Nvidia 6%.
Treasury yields drove the damage. The 10-year rose above 4.5% and the 30-year topped 5% again as money markets moved to price a 98% chance of a Fed hike this year. The bond market’s warning, flagged in every briefing this week, finally arrived in equities all at once.
02 The repricing reaches Brazil — bullish real bets unwind
The hot print reverberated through emerging markets, and Brazil felt it on its first day back from the Corpus Christi holiday. CFTC positioning data showed speculative net long bets on the real collapsing to 47.0K contracts from 71.7K — a sharp retreat as the prospect of a near-certain Fed hike and a 30-year US yield above 5% pulled capital back toward the dollar.
The mechanism is the carry trade in reverse. For months the real’s 14.50% Selic offered the best risk-adjusted yield among major economies, drawing inflows even as US tensions simmered. A US labour market this strong narrows that differential and raises the dollar’s pull, the classic squeeze on emerging-market currencies when American rates rise.
It hands the Copom a sharper dilemma into its next decision. Brazil’s domestic economy is already cooling — manufacturing in contraction, services slowing — which argues for sticking to the glide toward a 13.25% year-end Selic. But a weaker real reignites imported inflation just as oil sits near $96, the precise bind that forces a central bank to choose between defending its currency and supporting growth. The high real-rate buffer that gave Brazil optionality all week just got more expensive to spend.
03 The paradox — the strongest economies are punishing their markets
The counter-current is global and inverted. India’s GDP roared 7.8%, Canada added 87.8K jobs against a 10.6K forecast, and US payrolls doubled expectations — yet the reward was falling stocks and rising yields almost everywhere.
In a higher-for-longer regime, growth is the enemy of valuations because it delays the rate relief that justifies them. Citi trimmed equity exposure citing inflation and positioning risks; one prominent strategist now forecasts a three-phase path that includes a correction or bear market. The Eurozone, by contrast, contracted 0.2% in Q1 — and the ECB is still expected to hike alongside the Fed and BoE in the next two weeks. When weak economies and strong economies both face tightening, the cycle has turned.
04 What to watch today and this week
Monday: Brazil’s IPCA inflation print and BCB Focus survey — the first read on whether the real’s slide is feeding inflation expectations.
Tuesday: Any stabilisation in the chip complex after a $1 trillion wipeout; watch Nvidia and Broadcom for a dip-buy or further unwind.
This week: The Federal Reserve’s first meeting under Chair Kevin Warsh, with hike odds at 98% — the most consequential policy event of the quarter.
This week: The ECB and Bank of England decisions, both expected to hike, testing whether developed-market tightening is now synchronised.
This week: Whether the US-Iran ceasefire holds with talks stalled into the weekend. A breakdown sends oil higher and compounds the inflation problem the Fed is already pricing.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did stocks crash on a strong jobs report?
In the current environment, strong economic data is bearish for stocks because it removes the case for rate cuts and strengthens the case for a hike. Payrolls at 172K — more than double the 85K consensus — showed a resilient labour market that, combined with oil near $96, keeps inflation risk elevated. Treasury yields jumped, with the 30-year topping 5%, and money markets moved to a 98% chance of a Fed hike this year. Higher yields compress the valuations of high-growth technology stocks most, which is why the Nasdaq fell hardest.
Why were chip stocks hit hardest?
Semiconductors had risen more than 92% in 2026 and carried the richest valuations, making them most sensitive to rising discount rates. The selloff began Thursday when Broadcom’s revenue miss raised doubts about AI demand, then accelerated Friday: Marvell fell 16%, Micron 13%, AMD and Intel around 11%, and Nvidia 6%. When yields rise, the future earnings that justify high multiples are worth less today, and the most expensive, most crowded trade unwinds first.
How does the US jobs report affect Brazil’s real?
It pressures the currency. Speculative net long positions on the real fell to 47.0K contracts from 71.7K as the strong US data and a 30-year yield above 5% drew capital back toward the dollar. The real’s appeal rests on Brazil’s 14.50% Selic offering a large yield advantage; when US rates rise and a Fed hike becomes near-certain, that advantage narrows. A weaker real also risks importing inflation through fuel costs, complicating the central bank’s plan to continue easing toward 13.25% by year-end.
Is the Federal Reserve definitely going to hike?
Markets are pricing it as nearly certain — a 98% probability of an increase this year following the jobs report. The combination of resilient employment, oil-driven inflation pressure, and a 30-year yield above 5% leaves new Chair Kevin Warsh little room to ease despite a White House mandate to lower rates. The June meeting is his first as chair. A hike would complete a remarkable reversal from the rate-cut expectations that prevailed when he was appointed.
Will the rotation into value continue?
It depends on whether yields keep rising. Thursday’s rotation into healthcare and financials was orderly, but Friday’s session was a broad selloff that hit most sectors, not a clean rotation — the Russell 2000 fell 3.47% alongside tech. If the Fed hikes and yields stabilise, value and cyclical sectors with lower valuations may continue to outperform expensive growth names. If yields spike further, the selling tends to become indiscriminate, as Friday showed. The Fed meeting this week is the decisive variable.
Reported for The Rio Times — Global Economy Briefing. Filed June 6, 2026 — 08:00 BRT. Sources: CNBC, TheStreet, The Motley Fool, Trading Economics, Reuters. Previously: June 5 · June 4.
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