Dear readers,
On Thursday we wrote that the entire high-multiple tech complex — hardware and software alike — was acutely vulnerable to interest rates, and that Friday’s jobs report would determine whether that vulnerability became a full-blown repricing. The answer arrived swiftly, and it was worse than the consensus feared. The number came in hot. Now, as the week opens, two forces are pulling markets in opposite directions: a macro environment that just got meaningfully more hawkish, and a product announcement from Cupertino that could redefine how 1.25 billion consumers interact with artificial intelligence.
Tim Cook’s Last Big Stage
Apple’s WWDC 2026 kicks off this evening, and it carries unusual weight. Tim Cook is expected to deliver what will likely be his final marquee keynote before handing operational control to John Ternus in September. The centerpiece: a wholesale reconstruction of Siri, powered by a deep integration of Google’s Gemini models. Apple is reportedly paying roughly $1 billion annually for the partnership — a substantial sum that nonetheless looks modest next to the tens of billions Meta, Google, and Microsoft are pouring into training proprietary foundation models from scratch.
The rebuilt Siri is designed to operate across Apple’s ecosystem, pulling context from personal data and executing multi-step tasks. For investors, the strategic logic is clear. Apple is buying its way to AI competitiveness at a fraction of the cost its rivals are spending, leveraging its distribution advantage rather than competing on raw model development.
The iPhone Supercycle Thesis
The real financial upside, however, isn’t the assistant itself — it’s the hardware refresh it could trigger. Apple’s new “Apple Intelligence” features are expected to run smoothly only on the iPhone 15 Pro and later models. That requirement effectively turns a software launch into a hardware sales event across a base of 1.25 billion iPhones.
Bernstein projects a 13 percent earnings-per-share increase from the resulting accelerated replacement cycle alone. An additional 16 percent EPS uplift could come from premium AI service upselling. Evercore ISI anticipates what it calls an “iCloud-style AI subscription” — a recurring revenue stream layered on top of the device upgrade. With iOS 27 debuting alongside these features, Apple is building the infrastructure to make artificial intelligence a mass-market subscription product for the first time.
The Jobs Report Fallout
That consumer AI optimism collides with a macro picture that deteriorated sharply on Friday. The May nonfarm payrolls report delivered 172,000 new jobs — more than double the 85,000 consensus we flagged last week — with the unemployment rate holding at 4.3 percent. The labor market isn’t cooling on schedule after all.
Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying SpaceX?
Goldman Sachs has now pushed its first rate cut expectation out to 2027. The repricing we warned about on Thursday materialized with force: roughly $1.3 trillion in market capitalization was erased from the U.S. semiconductor sector on Friday, compounding the damage from Broadcom’s disappointing guidance. Geopolitical risk added another layer of pressure. Israeli military operations against Iran rattled energy markets, and while President Trump indicated that Israel paused strikes at his request, the EU Commission has already tallied €47 billion in additional fossil fuel import costs over the past 100 days tied to the conflict.
SpaceX and the Liquidity Drain
One stock is bucking the semiconductor selloff: Marvell Technology jumped 9 percent in premarket trading on Monday, propelled by its confirmed addition to the S&P 500 on June 22. But the broader liquidity picture remains challenging, and the reason is a single name.
SpaceX’s IPO, expected to price on Friday at a reported valuation of $1.75 trillion, is already exerting gravitational pull on capital allocation across risk assets. Portfolio managers raising cash to participate in the largest public offering in history are trimming existing positions — a mechanical selling pressure we identified last week that has since intensified. The effect is most visible in crypto: U.S. Bitcoin spot ETFs have recorded 13 consecutive days of outflows totaling $4.4 billion, pushing Bitcoin below $60,000 before a partial recovery toward $63,000 in recent sessions.
What It Means
This week presents a rare collision of forces. Apple’s keynote this evening could validate the thesis that AI’s most profitable phase isn’t building infrastructure — it’s selling intelligence directly to consumers at scale. Wednesday’s U.S. inflation data will test whether Friday’s hot jobs number was an outlier or the start of a sustained repricing of rate expectations. And SpaceX’s IPO on Friday will redistribute capital in ways that won’t be fully visible for weeks.
The companies that emerge strongest from this environment will be the ones we’ve been tracking since last week: those combining genuine AI revenue with cost discipline and margin stability. Apple’s billion-dollar bet on Google’s models rather than building its own is, in that sense, the most disciplined AI strategy in big tech. Whether the market rewards that discipline depends entirely on how much room interest rates leave for growth stocks to breathe.
Best regards,
The StocksToday.com Editorial
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