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* Futures: Dow up 0.22%, S&P down 0.34%, Nasdaq down
0.82%
June 5 (Reuters) - U.S. stock index futures fell on
Friday, as chipmakers lost steam following a strong rally and
investors stayed cautious ahead of the May employment report,
which could shape expectations for the Federal Reserve's policy
path.
Semiconductors led the declines. Nvidia ( NVDA ), the
largest company by market value, fell 1.5%, while Intel ( INTC )
, Micron, AMD and Broadcom ( AVGO )
dropped between 2% and 3.8% in premarket trading.
Gains in semiconductor stocks were instrumental in Wall
Street's recovery from March lows to record highs. A temporary
ceasefire in the Middle East and strong earnings growth also
supported the gains.
"Momentum in AI/Semis feels more shaky," Barclays strategist
Emmanuel Cau said, pointing to crowded positioning, looming
liquidity events from large IPOs and policy risks.
The spotlight will turn to the Labor Department's data at
8:30 a.m. ET, which is expected to show nonfarm payrolls rose by
85,000 jobs in May, after increasing 115,000 in April, according
to a Reuters survey of economists. The pace is likely consistent
with a stable labor market.
"So long as the labour market stays in decent shape, that
will keep the focus on the inflation side of the Fed's mandate,
which has moved increasingly above target given the energy
shock," Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid said in a note.
The data comes ahead of the new Federal Reserve Chair Kevin
Warsh's first policy meeting later this month, as he takes
charge of an economy grappling with elevated inflation, partly
exacerbated by the Middle East conflict, and a subdued labor
market marked by layoffs and fewer hirings.
Money markets expect the central bank to keep rates
unchanged into next year.
Hezbollah rejected a new Lebanon ceasefire, while Israel
said it would keep troops in place, dealing a blow to U.S.
President Donald Trump's push to end the fighting and advance
talks with Tehran.
Citi said it was trimming equity exposure after a strong
run. It had taken a bullish call when the Middle East ceasefire
took hold in April. It flagged rising inflation and positioning
risks, while keeping a constructive longer-term view on U.S.
equities supported by AI-driven earnings.
At 05:14 a.m. ET, Dow E-minis were up 116 points, or
0.22%, and S&P 500 E-minis were down 26 points, or
0.34%. Nasdaq 100 E-minis were down 250.25 points, or
0.82%.
If losses hold through the session, the S&P 500 would
register its first weekly decline since April. The tech-heavy
Nasdaq was also set to end the week slightly lower, while the
price-weighted Dow was on track to rise for the third straight
week.
S&P Global said it would not change the eligibility
requirements for its major indices, which effectively rules out
a swift entry for Elon Musk's SpaceX to the benchmark S&P 500
for what would be the world's biggest IPO.
Among other major moves, Lululemon Athletica ( LULU )
slumped nearly 12% after the athletic apparel maker cut its
annual profit forecast and projected second-quarter earnings
well below Wall Street estimates.
Cooper Companies ( COO ) rose 4.8% after the maker of
contact lenses beat estimates for second-quarter results.
(Reporting by Medha Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini
Ganguli)