U.S. stocks ended Friday under pressure as investors cooled on the market’s recent tech-driven run. Reuters reported that the S&P 500 fell 1.1%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.8% to 0.9%, and the Nasdaq dropped about 1.4% to 1.6% as rising Treasury yields and higher oil prices hit sentiment. The move came just a day after a strong session in which the Dow reclaimed the 50,000 level and the S&P 500 pushed above 7,500 for the first time. Reuters and market data showed the Dow closed Thursday at 50,063.46, while the S&P 500 remained near record territory after a powerful multi-day advance. Tech leaders finally lost some steam The biggest pressure came from the same names that had been driving the rally higher. Reuters said rising yields tested the AI-fueled trade, while traders also reacted to renewed inflation worries and a jump in oil prices, which tends to complicate the outlook for growth stocks. Several headline stocks tied to the market’s recent momentum also cooled. In recent sessions, traders had been focused on megacap tech and semiconductor names, with Nvidia and other AI-linked stocks helping push the S&P 500 and Nasdaq to record highs earlier in the week. Equally important, the Dow’s ability to stay above 50,000 remains a major sentiment marker for the broader market. What stood out today A notable feature of Friday’s move was that the broader market was not falling evenly. Some smaller-cap names held up better than the mega-cap growth trade, with the Russell 2000 showing relative strength even as the major indexes slipped. That kind of rotation often signals investors are becoming more selective rather than abandoning equities altogether. The market’s tone also shifted after a week of optimism tied to U.S.-China trade headlines and continued enthusiasm for artificial intelligence. Still, the latest pullback suggests traders are paying closer attention to bond yields, inflation pressure, and whether the rally has outrun near-term fundamentals. For now, the message is straightforward: the uptrend is still alive, but it is becoming less one-way. If yields keep climbing, the market may need a deeper reset before the next leg higher. If they stabilize, the S&P 500 and Dow could quickly regain their footing.