Daily market regime, sector leadership, scanner-based setups, and a synthesized report.
Friday’s close is still the main story because after-hours did not materially change the setup: the S&P 500 finished at 7,408.50, down 1.24%, and the Nasdaq closed at 26,225.14, down 1.54%, while SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) fell 1.20% and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) dropped 1.51%. After the bell, SPY (SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust) slipped another 0.25% and QQQ (Invesco QQQ Trust) lost 0.34%, which is notable but not enough to override the regular-session narrative; it mainly tells you tech stayed soft into the close. One trading day has passed since the 2026-05-15 brief, and the key change is sharp: yesterday’s AI-infrastructure leadership did not broaden again — it cracked, especially in semis and hardware. The macro backdrop did the damage. Rising oil near $109, a fresh bond selloff, and a stronger dollar pushed inflation fears back to the front of the tape, which in plain English means traders started worrying that rates may stay higher for longer.
That matters because expensive growth stocks depend on future earnings being worth a lot in today’s dollars, and higher yields reduce that appeal fast. Breadth confirmed this was not a one-group wobble: only 225 stocks advanced while 660 fell, with the market in a clear broad_selloff regime. The contradiction is that rotation data still shows a sustained risk-on backdrop over the last 10 days, but today’s tape looked much more like forced de-risking than healthy rotation. Cyclicals were worse than defensives on the day, but defensives were hardly a true shelter either — Utilities got hit hard and Consumer Defensive was only relatively better, not strong. The only sector with real sponsorship was Energy, helped by crude strength, while yesterday’s favorite AI complex became today’s source of pressure through names like NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation), AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.), and MU (Micron Technology, Inc.). That tells you the day’s move was more symptomatic than idiosyncratic: the same macro driver hit rates, tech, cyclicals, and sentiment all at once.
The key contradiction under the hood is that software and a few enterprise names still worked while semis were being sold aggressively. If that split resolves in favor of software holding up and chips stabilizing, this becomes a normal pullback. If software rolls over too, then Friday was likely the start of a larger unwind in crowded growth. For swing traders, this is no longer a “press longs aggressively” tape; it is a “tighten stops, size down, and only buy the strongest relative-strength pockets on pullbacks” tape. The single highest-conviction tactical implication for the next few sessions: treat this as a market to defend first, then selectively stalk Energy and a few software names only if they hold support while semis keep bleeding.
What happened: The market spent Friday repricing inflation risk after oil pushed near $109 and bond yields rose again. When crude and yields jump together, traders start thinking the Fed may stay tighter for longer, which hurts most stocks but helps oil producers and refiners.
How the market reacted: VG (Venture Global, Inc.) (+9.38%), XOM (Exxon Mobil Corporation) (+4.07%), OXY (Occidental Petroleum Corporation) (+4.89%), DVN (Devon Energy Corporation) (+4.76%), APA (APA Corporation) (+5.04%)
What it means for your watchlist: This was the cleanest leadership pocket in the entire market because it was broad inside the sector, not just one stock squeezing higher. Refining, Integrated, and E&P all confirmed the move, which makes Energy more durable than a one-day commodity headline trade. The stock to watch closely is VG (Venture Global, Inc.), because it is trying to break out of a recovery range while the sector backdrop is improving. The risk is obvious: if crude cools off fast, a lot of this leadership can fade just as quickly as it arrived. What would keep the story alive is Energy holding green even if the major indexes chop around again.
What happened: The market’s favorite growth group finally got hit. This was not one bad stock-specific headline — it was a broad de-rating across chips as higher yields and stretched positioning pushed traders to take profits in the group that had been carrying the tape.
How the market reacted: NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) (-4.42%), AMD (Advanced Micro Devices, Inc.) (-5.69%), MU (Micron Technology, Inc.) (-6.62%), INTC (Intel Corporation) (-6.18%), ARM (Arm Holdings plc) (-8.46%)
What it means for your watchlist: This matters more than any single index print because semis are still the market’s main growth thermometer. When the whole group gets sold together, it usually means institutions are reducing risk rather than rotating neatly within tech. NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) remains above key moving averages, so this is not automatically a trend break, but the close near the day’s low says buyers did not step in with much conviction. If semis stabilize above support over the next few sessions, this becomes a buy-the-pullback setup. If they keep undercutting, the broader Nasdaq probably has more work to do on the downside.
What happened: Even while semis were getting hit, software held up surprisingly well. Traders still showed willingness to pay for enterprise names with cleaner recurring revenue and less direct exposure to chip-cycle hype.
How the market reacted: TEAM (Atlassian Corporation) (+8.16%), HUBS (HubSpot, Inc.) (+8.13%), NOW (ServiceNow, Inc.) (+5.05%), WDAY (Workday, Inc.) (+5.27%), GWRE (Guidewire Software, Inc.) (+5.25%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is the most important second-order tell on the board. It says tech weakness was not universal; the market sold hardware duration and crowded AI beta, but it still wanted software cash-flow quality. That creates a much better hunting ground for swing traders than trying to catch a falling chip name on day one. The caution is that some of these software names had weak 5-day trends before Friday’s pop, so one green day is not enough to call a new leadership regime. What would prove this group is real is if names like NOW (ServiceNow, Inc.) and WDAY (Workday, Inc.) hold gains while semis stay messy.
What happened: When yields rise and the market mood turns defensive, the first things to get sold are usually the fast-money names. That happened again in crypto-linked finance and high-beta capital-markets names.
How the market reacted: COIN (Coinbase Global, Inc.) (-7.82%), IREN (IREN Limited) (-9.35%), FUTU (Futu Holdings Limited) (-4.85%), NU (Nu Holdings Ltd.) (-5.72%), RKT (Rocket Companies, Inc.) (-6.51%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is classic risk-off behavior, and it tells you appetite for speculative longs dropped fast. The important part is not that these stocks fell — they always swing — but that they fell while the broader market was also weak, which usually means fewer places to hide if the selloff extends. If you were following aggressive momentum names from earlier this week, this is your signal to tighten up, not average down blindly. The strongest counterpoint is that insurance pockets inside financials were still green, so this was not a total collapse in all finance. But for now, higher-beta financial exposure is the wrong neighborhood.
What happened: One of the stranger parts of the session was that gold and metal miners did not behave like a clean inflation hedge. Instead, they were liquidated alongside the rest of the tape, which suggests this was more of a de-risking day than a clean commodity rotation.
How the market reacted: FCX (Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) (-4.73%), CDE (Coeur Mining, Inc.) (-9.23%), HL (Hecla Mining Company) (-9.31%), B (Barrick Mining Corporation) (-5.91%), KGC (Kinross Gold Corporation) (-8.13%)
What it means for your watchlist: This matters because it tells you the market was not rotating neatly into “inflation winners” across the board. Energy worked, but Gold, Copper, and much of Basic Materials did not confirm the same story. That is a sign of narrow leadership and stressed liquidity, not healthy cyclical rotation. For traders, that means you should not assume all commodity-linked names are interchangeable. If Energy keeps leading while miners stay broken, stick with the oil complex and avoid trying to outsmart the weakness in metals too early.
What happened: Yesterday’s brief flagged improving industrial and cyclical participation as something bulls wanted to see. Friday did the opposite: autos, electrical equipment, and industrial beta gave back hard, which means that budding breadth improvement failed almost immediately.
How the market reacted: F (Ford Motor Company) (-7.46%), BE (Bloom Energy Corporation) (-9.05%), RKLB (Rocket Lab Corporation) (-5.87%), QXO (QXO, Inc.) (-6.31%), RBC (RBC Bearings Incorporated) (-7.01%)
What it means for your watchlist: This is the clearest continuity break from the 2026-05-15 brief. F (Ford Motor Company), flagged positively yesterday after its strength, reversed violently and reminds you why short-term narrative trades need disciplined stops. The same goes for power/infrastructure names like BE (Bloom Energy Corporation), which had looked like a smart cross-sector AI/electricity theme but got sold hard. That does not kill those themes permanently, but it does say institutions were not willing to defend secondary cyclicals when the macro pressure hit. If these names cannot reclaim Friday’s losses quickly, they move from watchlist candidates to “let them rebuild first” charts.
| Sector / Industry | 1D | 5D | 20D | Trend | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy | +1.67% | +5.33% | +6.74% | 84 | VG (Venture Global, Inc.) (+9.38%) |
| Consumer Defensive | -0.40% | +1.28% | +3.89% | 49 | KO (Coca-Cola Company) (+0.46%) |
| Financial Services | -0.71% | -0.91% | -3.02% | 36 | MUFG (Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.) (+1.95%) |
| Communication Services | -0.97% | -0.72% | +8.59% | 46 | NFLX (Netflix, Inc.) (+0.09%) |
| Healthcare | -1.15% | +0.87% | -2.29% | 40 | DXCM (DexCom, Inc.) (+6.59%) |
| Technology | -1.69% | +0.95% | +12.82% | 59 | MSFT (Microsoft Corporation) (+3.05%) |
| Real Estate | -1.58% | -2.72% | -2.50% | 36 | CSGP (CoStar Group, Inc.) (+2.61%) |
| Consumer Cyclical | -2.01% | -2.70% | -2.08% | 34 | CUK (Carnival Plc) (+6.56%) |
| Industrials | -2.12% | -1.11% | -0.19% | 39 | CSX (CSX Corporation) (-0.57%) |
| Utilities | -2.57% | -2.42% | -4.56% | 29 | AES (The AES Corporation) (+0.07%) |
| Basic Materials | -4.12% | -2.88% | -3.67% | 31 | VALE (VALE S.A.) (-1.57%) |
Energy is the only sector that looked like true leadership rather than just “less bad.” The proof sits inside Oil & Gas Refining & Marketing, Oil & Gas Integrated, and Oil & Gas E&P, all of which were green across 1D, 5D, and 20D. In a broad_selloff regime, that kind of internal confirmation matters because it says money is not hiding there by accident. VG (Venture Global, Inc.), XOM (Exxon Mobil Corporation), and OXY (Occidental Petroleum Corporation) all tell the same story. With Energy the only sector entering leadership while the 5-day momentum shift stays neutral, this looks tradable but still headline-sensitive to crude.
The second “where money is going” answer is not a sector ETF answer at all — it is selective Technology, specifically Software - Infrastructure and Software - Application. The parent sector was red, but the leading industries inside it were green while semis got hit. That is a huge clue that institutions were rotating within tech rather than abandoning it outright. MSFT (Microsoft Corporation), IOT (Samsara Inc.), and the software winners from the day give you a cleaner roadmap than the whole sector does.
The suspect leadership call is Communication Services. The sector was red, but Advertising Agencies was green thanks to a very narrow internal split, with APP (AppLovin Corporation) up while TTD (The Trade Desk, Inc.) fell 6.68%. That is not broad sponsorship; that is a small pocket making the sector look healthier than it really is. Narrow moves like that usually have worse follow-through unless more names join quickly.
The inverse case is Industrials. The sector was down more than 2%, but Trucking, Consulting Services, and Specialty Business Services were green on the day, while Electrical Equipment & Parts got crushed. That tells you the headline sector weakness was broad, but not uniform. The most important read is that BE (Bloom Energy Corporation) collapsing inside a formerly hot industry matters more than small green pockets elsewhere, because it shows yesterday’s power/infrastructure enthusiasm is now under stress.
The clearest cross-sector tell is that software is now acting better than semiconductors inside the same broad tech complex. Software - Application and Software - Infrastructure were green while Semiconductors and Electronic Components were among the weakest industries on the board. That is a real rotation, not noise. NOW (ServiceNow, Inc.) and TEAM (Atlassian Corporation) are much more useful charts right now than NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) if you are looking for new long exposure.
Another important tell is that Agricultural Inputs is the rare relative winner hiding inside a very weak Basic Materials wrapper. The parent sector was down more than 4%, but that industry held basically flat on the day and remains positive over 5D and 20D. That does not make the sector bullish, but it does tell you not every hard-asset chart is equally broken.
A third tell is that Insurance - Property & Casualty and Insurance - Reinsurance are outperforming inside weak Financial Services. That is defensive broadening across a sector most traders would normally read as cyclical. It makes names like GL (Globe Life Inc.) and other insurance charts more interesting than crypto brokers, exchanges, or mortgage lenders in the same sector bucket.
Fear & Greed is still 62.9, Greed, down from 66.1, which is not panic at all. That is important because it means Friday’s selloff happened while sentiment was still relatively complacent. In other words, there is room for more downside if leadership keeps breaking. At the same time, the rotation backdrop still shows 8 risk-on days and 0 risk-off days in the recent sample, which raises the odds that this is a stress test of a still-bullish intermediate trend rather than the end of the whole move. But long streaks eventually get interrupted, and Friday looked like the first real interruption attempt.
The cleanest bullish reversal scenario is semis finding support while software keeps absorbing flows and Energy refuses to give back its gains. If NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) holds the 224-220 area and software leaders stay firm, Friday becomes a healthy rotation day. The bearish flip is easier to picture: Energy cools off with oil, software gives back Friday’s relative strength, and the market loses its last clean leadership pockets. That would invalidate the current “selective long” thesis and push traders toward even smaller size or cash.
VG (Venture Global, Inc.) (+9.38%) — best chart for broad Energy leadership and a live breakout test above the low-13s.
NVDA (NVIDIA Corporation) (-4.42%) — the single most important stress chart for whether growth leadership is merely pulling back or truly cracking.
NOW (ServiceNow, Inc.) (+5.05%) — clean relative-strength software name if the market keeps rotating from chips into enterprise quality.
BE (Bloom Energy Corporation) (-9.05%) — failure test for the prior power/infrastructure theme inside weak Industrials.
CDE (Coeur Mining, Inc.) (-9.23%) — captures how badly broken the gold/miner complex is despite an inflation-driven macro backdrop.
1) PANW (Palo Alto Networks, Inc.) — Score 64 — 1D +1.94% | 5D +16.81% | 20D +44.67%
2) ZS (Zscaler, Inc.) — Score 59 — 1D +4.78% | 5D +5.86% | 20D +19.58%
3) SNOW (Snowflake Inc.) — Score 52 — 1D +4.45% | 5D +3.29% | 20D +9.37%
4) MUFG (Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, Inc.) — Score 67 — 1D +1.95% | 5D +4.96% | 20D +1.78%
1) CBOE (Cboe Global Markets, Inc.) — Score 92 — 1D +1.21% | 5D +4.15% | 20D +21.03%
2) CSCO (Cisco Systems, Inc.) — Score 95 — 1D +2.32% | 5D +22.41% | 20D +37.06%
3) FFIV (F5, Inc.) — Score 93 — 1D -0.55% | 5D +2.42% | 20D +16.63%
4) RPRX (Royalty Pharma plc) — Score 85 — 1D -1.03% | 5D +4.06% | 20D +5.70%
This brief is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice. Do your own research and consider your risk tolerance before trading.