Global markets have taken a sharp hit over the past few days, wiping out trillions of dollars in value across stocks, crypto, gold, and other risk assets. The S&P 500 alone lost more than $1.8 trillion in a single session, while AI-related stocks shed over $1 trillion. Bitcoin slipped to around $59,000, and gold posted its worst weekly decline in months.
So what triggered such a broad selloff? In a recent X thread, one analyst has analyzed the current market sentiments.
Strong Economic Data Turned Into Bad News
The biggest catalyst was the latest U.S. jobs report. The economy added 172,000 jobs in May, almost double Wall Street’s expectations.


Normally, strong employment data would boost investor confidence. This time, however, markets interpreted it differently. Investors are currently focused less on economic growth and more on interest rates.
A strong labor market suggests the economy remains resilient, which increases the risk that inflation stays elevated. If inflation remains stubbornly high, the Federal Reserve may delay rate cuts or even consider tighter monetary policy.
That shift in expectations rattled markets, as higher interest rates reduce liquidity and make riskier investments less attractive.
AI Stocks Lead the Selloff
The technology sector took the biggest hit. The Nasdaq plunged more than 1,100 points, while semiconductor stocks lost over $1 trillion in value.
Many AI-related companies had already surged more than 20% in a short period, fueled by enthusiasm around artificial intelligence. With valuations stretched, investors began taking profits at the first sign that interest rate cuts may not arrive as quickly as expected.
The result was a sharp valuation reset across the AI sector.
Bitcoin, Crypto, and Gold Join the Decline
Crypto markets followed the same pattern. When investors become more risk-averse, highly volatile assets often face the largest outflows first.
Bitcoin dropped to around $59,000, dragging the broader crypto market lower. Fear quickly spread across altcoins as traders reduced exposure.


Gold also suffered. The precious metal fell nearly 5% this week and now sits roughly 18.5% below its all-time high. Rising bond yields, a stronger U.S. dollar, and growing rate-hike concerns all weighed on gold prices.
More Pressure Could Be Ahead
Markets also face growing geopolitical uncertainty tied to tensions involving Iran, which has raised concerns around energy prices and inflation.
At the same time, several massive IPOs could drain liquidity from markets. Reports suggest SpaceX is preparing for a public listing, while Anthropic and OpenAI are also exploring IPO plans. Large institutions often sell existing holdings to free up capital before major offerings.
Taken together, strong jobs data, higher rate fears, AI profit-taking, crypto weakness, geopolitical tensions, and upcoming capital raises created the perfect storm. For now, the market’s message is clear: investors care more about interest rates and liquidity than strong economic growth. Until inflation cools and rate-cut expectations return, volatility is likely to remain elevated.
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