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MORNING BID EUROPE-Small miss, big hit

Tom Westbrook gives us a look at what the future holds for European and global markets.

On Friday, the 'drawdown in tech stocks that followed a narrow miss on earnings at U.S. chipmaker Broadcom' deepened in Asia. This pushed South Korean stocks to their seventh weekly decline since 2026.

Broadcom's revenue for the second quarter of $22,19 billion was below expectations, which were $22,27 billion. However, it still stuck to its guidance for revenue of $100 billion next year. This sent shares down by 12.6%.

The results were shocking, as markets are accustomed to expecting constant upgrades. In Asia, the fallout highlighted the skepticism surrounding chips and the AI boom which fueled them.

Bob Savage, BNY's Head of Markets Macro Strategy and head of BNY's macro strategy, said that the?AI led equity rally was showing signs of exhaustion.

South Korea's KOSPI is headed for a?drop of 3% per week, with heavy drops?for Samsung shares and SK Hynix. Under pressure from foreign sellers, the won also traded at its lowest level since 2009.

Oil prices were stable on Friday, as traders awaited clarity in the U.S./Iran talks. However, this week's price is still higher than last week after previous flare-ups raised fears of an ongoing supply shock.

Brent crude was hovering around $95 per barrel and is expected to gain more than 3% in a week.

The session will be dominated by the U.S. jobs data on Friday. The expected rise in May payrolls is 85,000, but a surprise to the upside could boost the dollar.

The dollar index will likely gain a little each week. In Asia, the currency briefly touched 160 yen, which drew some verbal pushback from Japanese officials who intervened last month around that level.

The following are key developments that may influence the markets on Friday.

- U.S.-Iran developments

- U.S. employment data

(source: Reuters)