U.S. Stocks Lose Over $1T As Inflation And Iran Tensions Hit Tech


U.S. stocks suffered a trillion-dollar-scale selloff Wednesday as hotter inflation, rising oil prices and renewed U.S.-Iran war fears pushed investors out of high-growth trades. The S&P 500 fell 1.62% to 7,266.99, the Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.98% to 25,169.50, and the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 953.33 points, or 1.87%, to close below 50,000 at 49,918.78.

The size of the move puts the day’s equity loss above $1 trillion across the broader U.S. market. The S&P 500 covers around 80% of available U.S. equity market capitalization, so a 1.62% decline in the main large-cap benchmark alone is enough to turn a bad session into a trillion-dollar market-value wipeout.

Technology and AI-linked shares absorbed the heaviest pressure. Nvidia closed at $200.42, down 3.75%, AMD fell 5.03% to $452.40, and Tesla dropped 3.85% to $381.59. The broader S&P 500 is still short of a formal correction, but the S&P 500 technology sector has already moved more than 10% below its recent highs, turning the AI trade into the market’s main stress point.

May CPI Keeps Fed Pressure Alive

The latest May CPI report showed consumer prices rising 0.5% for the month and 4.2% over the past 12 months, up from 3.8% annual inflation in April. Core CPI, which excludes food and energy, rose 0.2% in May and 2.9% over the year. Energy remained the main pressure channel, with the energy index up 23.5% from a year earlier.

That mix leaves equities exposed to a difficult macro trade. Headline inflation is being pushed higher by energy, while core inflation is not falling fast enough to give risk assets an easy rate-cut narrative. Growth stocks usually absorb the first shock because more of their valuation depends on future earnings and lower discount rates.

Iran Tensions Lift Oil And Volatility

Fresh U.S.-Iran tension added a second pressure point. Brent crude climbed back above $93 a barrel as Middle East risk returned to the oil market, while renewed hostilities kept attention on supply routes, insurance costs and Strait of Hormuz disruption risk. The same energy-risk channel has already crossed into crypto payment infrastructure, with Bitcoin Lightning payment options tied to Strait of Hormuz services drawing sanctions and shipping-market attention.

Rising oil prices create a direct inflation feedback loop for investors. Higher crude can lift gasoline, freight and input costs, then pressure consumer spending and corporate margins. For the Federal Reserve, that makes the inflation path harder to ignore even if some demand indicators soften.

SpaceX FOMO Lands Into A Risk-Off Market

The selloff also landed as investors continued watching the upcoming SpaceX SPCX debut. Retail demand has intensified before the launch, with some investors trying to raise extra cash from banks or friends to secure exposure. That speculative tone now sits uneasily beside a market where tech stocks are already under pressure and investors are rotating away from richly valued growth names. The latest rush around retail traders seeking loans to chase SpaceX IPO shares shows how aggressive risk appetite can remain even as broader market conditions weaken.

The same macro stress is making tokenized-market infrastructure more relevant. Pyth’s 24/7 indices for equities, metals and oil show how crypto exchanges are preparing for always-on exposure to traditional assets at the exact moment stocks, crude and inflation are driving global risk appetite.

With the Dow below 50,000, the S&P 500 back near 7,267 and the Nasdaq carrying the heaviest AI-linked pressure, any further oil spike or rate-cut repricing would keep pressure concentrated in semiconductors, megacap tech and other long-duration growth trades.