Dow futures plunge 215 points: 5 things to know before Wall Street opens

Dow futures plunge 215 points: 5 things to know before Wall Street opens
Devesh Kumar
03 Jun 2026, 16:34 PM

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Broadcom (AI infrastructure)

Buy Broadcom (AVGO). The article points to AI hardware demand support and highlights AVGO’s sharp recent run plus a positive setup into results. If AI capex stays resilient, AVGO’s networking/accelerator exposure should keep outperforming even if the macro tape wobbles from oil and Fed data.

Key Risk: Earnings show AI spending is slowing (or margins compress) and the stock’s recent momentum reverses hard.

Brent/USOIL hedge

Sell iShares U.S. Oil Fund (USO) and buy a Brent-linked hedge (e.g., ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Crude Oil (UCO) as a short-term hedge) because the article flags renewed Middle East risk, but the market is already near record equity highs—oil spikes are likely to be a short-lived risk-off trigger, not a sustained supply shock. The goal is to profit from oil volatility mean-reverting while equities pause.

Key Risk: A real escalation that physically disrupts supply for weeks, keeping Brent elevated and pulling oil higher across the curve.

  • US futures dip after all three major indexes closed at record highs.
  • Brent crude nears $98 as Gulf tensions revive supply concerns.
  • AI demand keeps supporting chip stocks despite cautious sentiment.

US stock futures edged lower on Wednesday, pausing near record highs as a fresh rise in oil prices cooled risk appetite before key economic data.

Brent crude climbed after renewed Middle East tensions raised concerns over supply disruption near the Strait of Hormuz and the inflationary fallout from higher energy costs.

Still, the pullback was limited, with investors continuing to take support from artificial intelligence hardware demand, upbeat earnings from technology suppliers and a busy IPO pipeline led by SpaceX.

Traders now face fresh data that could shape Federal Reserve expectations and test Wall Street’s record-setting rally this week ahead.

5 things to know before Wall Street opens

1. Futures ease after record close

US stock index futures slipped in early trading after all three major benchmarks closed at record highs on Tuesday.

S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 futures were little changed, while Dow futures fell about 215 points, or 0.41%.

The pause came after the S&P 500 finished above 7,600 for the first time, underscoring the strength of the recent rally.

2. Oil rises as Gulf risks return

Brent crude rose 1.6% to $97.56 a barrel after renewed hostilities in the Middle East revived concern over energy supply risks.

The move followed an Iranian missile attack that damaged Kuwait’s airport and US military strikes near the Strait of Hormuz.

The Strait is a critical route for global oil flows, making any escalation in the area a direct concern for energy markets.

Higher oil prices can feed inflation expectations, particularly if traders begin to price in a prolonged disruption to supply.

That would complicate the outlook for the Federal Reserve at a time when investors are already watching whether the US economy remains too strong for policy easing.

3. AI hardware keeps supporting sentiment

Artificial intelligence remains one of the strongest supports for Wall Street’s rally.

Shares have been buoyed by fresh developments that point to sustained spending on AI hardware and infrastructure.

Broadcom rose 3% ahead of quarterly results due after the close.

The stock has gained 14% over the past four sessions, reflecting growing confidence that AI-related demand will continue to drive revenue for chip and networking suppliers.

4. SpaceX IPO plan puts deals back in focus

The IPO market is also drawing attention after a long stretch of muted large-cap listings.

Elon Musk’s SpaceX plans to fix its IPO price at $135 per share ahead of a roadshow to raise a record-setting $75 billion.

The planned listing is being watched as a test of investor appetite for high-profile private technology companies. It also comes as companies including Anthropic and OpenAI prepare to test public markets after years in which many late-stage startups delayed listings.

5. US data could shape the Fed outlook

Investors are now turning to economic data for clues on the next move in monetary policy.

Traders are watching S&P Global’s manufacturing and services surveys, along with the ISM services index, before Friday’s closely followed labour-market report.

The data could influence expectations for the Federal Reserve if it shows that growth and employment remain strong despite elevated borrowing costs.